Paper 1

Title: Supernova feedback in a local vertically stratified medium: interstellar turbulence and galactic winds

Supernova feedback in a local vertically stratified medium: interstellar turbulence and galactic winds Authors: Davide Martizzi, Drummond Fielding, Claude-André Faucher-Giguère, & Elliot Quataert

Davide Martizzi, Drummond Fielding, Claude-André Faucher-Giguère, & Elliot Quataert First Author’s Institution: Department of Astronomy and Theoretical Astrophysics Center, University of California Berkeley

Department of Astronomy and Theoretical Astrophysics Center, University of California Berkeley Status: Published in MNRAS, open access on arXiv

Paper 2

Title: How supernovae launch galactic winds

How supernovae launch galactic winds Authors: Drummond Fielding, Eliot Quataert, Davide Martizzi, & Claude-André Faucher-Giguère

Drummond Fielding, Eliot Quataert, Davide Martizzi, & Claude-André Faucher-Giguère First Author’s Institution: Department of Astronomy and Theoretical Astrophysics Center, University of California Berkeley

Department of Astronomy and Theoretical Astrophysics Center, University of California Berkeley Status: Submitted to MNRAS Letters, open access

Introduction

Star formation in the universe peaked at a redshift of z~2 (when the universe was only ~3 billion years old), and it’s been downhill ever since. This simple observation sparked one of the biggest open questions about galaxies: why did star formation rates start dropping at z~2? What physical processes could shut off (or quench) star formation?

To make stars, you need gas—so one way to stop forming stars is to remove the gas from a galaxy. That’s exactly what galactic winds do. Galactic winds are massive outflows of gas and other material that are launched from galaxies. Simulations that include galactic winds agree well with many different observations, suggesting that galactic winds may be responsible for multiple phenomena: not just quenching star formation, but also making star formation inefficient in typical star-forming galaxies, and heating the material around galaxies.

However, despite the fact that galactic winds have been directly observed multiple times, we still don’t fully understand how they actually work. We do think that feedback (the injection of energy and momentum into the interstellar medium) from supernovae probably plays a role.

Today’s papers (yes, today you get two paper summaries for the price of one!) aim to study this in more detail. Both papers are by the same authors, who examine two different ways to simulate supernova feedback.

Paper 1: Life is like a box of supernovae

Unfortunately, it’s computationally expensive to simulate an entire galaxy with resolution on the scale of individual supernovae. To get around this, nearly all previous simulations of supernova feedback have looked at local computations—that is, simulations of relatively small volumes within a galaxy (see Figure 1).

Today’s first paper presents some of these local computations. The authors run hydrodynamic simulations of a box with length ~1 kiloparsec, which they model as part of a galactic disk (the blue box in Figure 1). Supernovae are seeded at different places throughout the box, and each supernova inputs some energy and momentum into the box. The vast majority of this energy either radiates away or produces turbulence in the galaxy’s interstellar medium.

Only some (at most 10%) of the energy from supernovae actually helps power galactic winds, and this just isn’t enough to launch galactic winds that are as energetic as we’d expect. Other local simulations found the same result (for instance, check out this Astrobite, which also looks at other processes that can cause galactic winds). This suggests that supernovae by themselves might not produce galactic winds in the real world.

But maybe this isn’t the whole story. The authors of this paper also decide to play with the geometry of their simulation. As Figure 2 shows, when they increase the height of their simulated box (solid lines denote a smaller box, dashed lines denote a larger box), the outflow rate of the wind also changes. In other words, the output of a local simulation depends on its geometry!

Paper 2: The bigger picture

This brings us to today’s second paper, in which the authors try to avoid the limitations of local simulations by studying supernova feedback in a global context. They simulate entire galactic disks (orange box in Figure 1)—although they’re limited to relatively small disks, since they still have to resolve the individual supernovae that are seeded throughout the simulation volume.

The authors find that supernovae produce more powerful galactic winds in these global simulations than in local simulations. The winds are even more energetic if the supernovae are clustered more closely together, which is probably the case in real galaxies. (You can watch videos of the simulations here, if you want. They’re very pretty.)

These simulations are fairly simple and don’t include other physical processes that could be important, like galaxy rotation or magnetic fields. But even these preliminary results agree well with analytical expectations, implying that supernovae might play a larger role in producing galaxy winds than local simulations suggest!

Conclusion

Today’s papers reflect an inconvenient truth about simulations: you get out what you put in—and because of limited computing power, you just can’t put in everything. So you have trade-offs between spatial size, resolution, and the amount of physics in your simulation. It’s important to understand what trade-offs you’re making, and how they affect the scientific question you’re trying to answer.

With advancements in computing power, some of these trade-offs are slowly being eliminated. Today’s Astrobite, for example, illustrated a shift from local to global simulations that’s been occurring in multiple areas of computational astrophysics. These simulations still aren’t perfect, but they’re getting better at giving us insight into astrophysical phenomena on all scales.