4.7 Article

PRESSURE RELATIONS AND VERTICAL EQUILIBRIUM IN THE TURBULENT, MULTIPHASE INTERSTELLAR MEDIUM

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 693, Issue 2, Pages 1346-1359

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1088/0004-637X/693/2/1346

Keywords

galaxies: ISM; hydrodynamics; instabilities; ISM: general; methods: numerical; stars: formation; turbulence

Funding

  1. NASA [NNG05GG43G]
  2. NSF [AST 0540450]

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We use numerical simulations of turbulent, multiphase, self-gravitating gas orbiting in the disks of model galaxies to study the relationships among pressure, the vertical distribution of gas, and the relative proportions of dense and diffuse gas. A common assumption is that the interstellar medium (ISM) is in vertical hydrostatic equilibrium. We show that the disk height and mean midplane pressure in our multiphase, turbulent simulations are indeed consistent with effective hydrostatic equilibrium, provided that the turbulent contribution to the vertical velocity dispersion and the gas self-gravity are included. Although vertical hydrostatic equilibrium gives a good estimate for the mean midplane pressure < P >(midplane), this does not represent the pressure experienced by most of the ISM. Mass-weighted mean pressures < P >(rho). are typically an order of magnitude higher than < P >(midplane) because self-gravity concentrates gas and increases the pressure in individual clouds without raising the ambient pressure. We also investigate the ratio R(mol) = M(H2)/M(H1) for our hydrodynamic simulations. Blitz & Rosolowsky showed that R(mol) is proportional to the estimated midplane pressure in a number of systems. We find that for model series in which the epicyclic frequency kappa and gas surface density Sigma vary together as kappa alpha Sigma, we recover the empirical relation. For other model series in which kappa and Sigma are varied independently, the midplane pressure (or Sigma) and R(mol) are not well correlated. We conclude that the molecular fraction-and hence the star formation rate-of a galactic disk inherently depends on its rotational state, not just the local values of Sigma and the stellar density rho(*). The empirical result R(mol) alpha < P >(midplane) implies that the three environmental parameters kappa, Sigma, and rho(*) are interdependent in real galaxies, presumably as a consequence of evolution: real galaxies tend toward states with Toomre Q parameter near unity. Finally, we note that R(mol) in static comparison models far exceeds both the values in our turbulent hydrodynamic simulations and observed values of R(mol), when Sigma > 10 M(circle dot) pc(-2), indicating that incorporation of turbulence is crucial to obtaining a realistic molecular fraction in numerical models of the ISM.

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