4.7 Article

THE DISRUPTION OF GIANT MOLECULAR CLOUDS BY RADIATION PRESSURE & THE EFFICIENCY OF STAR FORMATION IN GALAXIES

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 709, Issue 1, Pages 191-209

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1088/0004-637X/709/1/191

Keywords

galaxies: formation; galaxies: general; galaxies: starburst; galaxies: star clusters: general; H II regions; ISM: bubbles; ISM: clouds; stars: formation

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Star formation is slow in the sense that the gas consumption time is much longer than the dynamical time. It is also inefficient; star formation in local galaxies takes place in giant molecular clouds (GMCs), but the fraction of a GMC converted to stars is very small, epsilon(GMC) similar to 5%. In luminous starbursts, the GMC lifetime is shorter than the main-sequence lifetime of even the most massive stars, so that supernovae can play no role in GMC disruption. We investigate the disruption of GMCs across a wide range of galaxies from normal spirals to the densest starbursts; we take into account the effects of H II gas pressure, shocked stellar winds, protostellar jets, and radiation pressure produced by the absorption and scattering of starlight on dust grains. In the Milky Way, a combination of three mechanisms-jets, H II gas pressure, and radiation pressure-disrupts the clouds. In more rapidly star-forming galaxies such as clump galaxies at high-redshift, ultra-luminous infrared galaxies (ULIRGs), and submillimeter galaxies, radiation pressure dominates natal cloud disruption. We predict the presence of similar to 10-20 clusters with masses similar to 10(7) M-circle dot in local ULIRGs such as Arp 220 and a similar number of clusters with M-* similar to 10(8) M-circle dot in high redshift clump galaxies; submillimeter galaxies will have even more massive clusters. We find that epsilon(GMC) = pi G Sigma(GMC)c/(2(L/M-*)) for GMCs that are optically thin to far-infrared radiation, where Sigma(GMC) is the GMC gas surface density. The efficiency in optically thick systems continues to increase with SGMC, but more slowly, reaching similar to 35% in the most luminous starbursts. The disruption of bubbles by radiation pressure stirs the interstellar medium (ISM) to velocities of similar to 10 km s(-1) in normal galaxies and to similar to 100 km s(-1) in ULIRGs like Arp 220, consistent with observations. Thus, radiation pressure may play a dominant dynamical role in the ISM of star-forming galaxies.

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