English

Supernova Feedback in Molecular Clouds: Global Evolution and Dynamics

Astrophysics of Galaxies 2016-04-27 v1

Abstract

We use magnetohydrodynamical simulations of converging warm neutral medium flows to analyse the formation and global evolution of magnetised and turbulent molecular clouds subject to supernova feedback from massive stars. We show that supernova feedback alone fails to disrupt entire, gravitationally bound, molecular clouds, but is able to disperse small--sized (~10 pc) regions on timescales of less than 1 Myr. Efficient radiative cooling of the supernova remnant as well as strong compression of the surrounding gas result in non-persistent energy and momentum input from the supernovae. However, if the time between subsequent supernovae is short and they are clustered, large hot bubbles form that disperse larger regions of the parental cloud. On longer timescales, supernova feedback increases the amount of gas with moderate temperatures (T~300-3000 K). Despite its inability to disrupt molecular clouds, supernova feedback leaves a strong imprint on the star formation process. We find an overall reduction of the star formation efficiency by a factor of 2 and of the star formation rate by roughly factors of 2-4.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1603.09593,
  title  = {Supernova Feedback in Molecular Clouds: Global Evolution and Dynamics},
  author = {Bastian Körtgen and Daniel Seifried and Robi Banerjee and Enrique Vázquez-Semadeni and Manuel Zamora-Avilés},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1603.09593},
  year   = {2016}
}

Comments

16 pages, 12 figures (2 in appendix), revised version, submitted to MNRAS

R2 v1 2026-06-22T13:22:22.254Z