Assessing Radiation Pressure as a Feedback Mechanism in Star-Forming Galaxies

Nov, 2010
12 pages
Published in:
  • Astrophys.J. 727 (2011) 97
e-Print:

Citations per year

201020132016201920220246810
Abstract: (arXiv)
Radiation pressure from the absorption and scattering of starlight by dust grains may be an important feedback mechanism in regulating star-forming galaxies. We compile data from the literature on star clusters, star-forming subregions, normal star-forming galaxies, and starbursts to assess the importance of radiation pressure on dust as a feedback mechanism, by comparing the luminosity and flux of these systems to their dust Eddington limit. This exercise motivates a novel interpretation of the Schmidt Law, the LIR-L'CO correlation, and the LIR-L'HCN correlation. In particular, the linear LIR-L'HCN correlation is a natural prediction of radiation pressure regulated star formation. Overall, we find that the Eddington limit sets a hard upper bound to the luminosity of any star-forming region. Importantly, however, many normal star-forming galaxies have luminosities significantly below the Eddington limit. We explore several explanations for this discrepancy, especially the role of "intermittency" in normal spirals - the tendency for only a small number of subregions within a galaxy to be actively forming stars at any moment because of the time-dependence of the feedback process and the luminosity evolution of the stellar population. If radiation pressure regulates star formation in dense gas, then the gas depletion timescale is 6 Myr, in good agreement with observations of the densest starbursts. Finally, we highlight the importance of observational uncertainties - namely, the dust-to-gas ratio and the CO-H2 and HCN-H2 conversion factors - that must be understood before a definitive assessment of radiation pressure as a feedback mechanism in star-forming galaxies.
Note:
  • 12 pages, emulateapj, Accepted for publication in ApJ