The pressure of the star-forming interstellar medium in cosmological simulations

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Abstract

We examine the pressure of the star-forming interstellar medium (ISM) of Milky-Way-sized disk galaxies using fully cosmological SPH+N-body, high-resolution simulations. These simulations include explicit treatment of metal-line cooling in addition to dust and self-shielding, H2-based star formation. The four simulated halos have masses ranging from a few times 10 10 to nearly 1012 solar masses. Using a kinematic decomposition of these galaxies into present-day bulge and disk components, we find that the typical pressure of the star-forming ISM in the present-day bulge is higher than that in the present-day disk by an order of magnitude. We also find that the pressure of the star-forming ISM at high redshift is, on average, higher than ISM pressures at low redshift. This explains why the bulge forms at higher pressures: the disk assembles at lower redshift when the ISM exhibits lower pressure and the bulge forms at high redshift when the ISM has higher pressure. If ISM pressure and IMF variation are tied together, these results could indicate a time-dependent IMF in Milky-Way-like systems as well as a different IMF in the bulge and the disk. © 2014. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved..

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Munshi, F., Christensen, C., Quinn, T. R., Governato, F., Wadsley, J., Loebman, S., & Shen, S. (2014). The pressure of the star-forming interstellar medium in cosmological simulations. Astrophysical Journal Letters, 781(1). https://doi.org/10.1088/2041-8205/781/1/L14

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