Galactic porosity and a star formation threshold for the escape of ionizing radiation from galaxies

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Abstract

The spatial distribution of star formation within galaxies strongly affects the resulting feedback processes. Previous work has considered the case of a single, concentrated nuclear starburst, and also that of distributed single supernovae (SNe). Here, we consider interstellar medium (ISM) structuring by SNe originating in spatially distributed clusters having a cluster membership spectrum given by the observed H II region luminosity function. We show that, in this case, the volume of H I cleared per SN is considerably greater than in either of the two cases considered hitherto. We derive a simple relationship between the 'porosity' of the ISM and the star formation rate (SFR) and deduce a critical SFRcrit, at which the ISM porosity is unity. This critical value describes the case in which the SN mechanical energy output over a time-scale (te) is comparable with the ISM 'thermal' energy contained in random motions; te is the duration of SN mechanical input per superbubble. This condition also defines a critical gas consumption time-scale texh, which for a Salpeter initial mass function and random velocities of ≃10 km s-1 is roughly 1010 yr. We draw a link between porosity and the escape of ionizing radiation from galaxies, arguing that high escape fractions are expected if SFR ≳ SFRcrit. The Lyman break galaxies, which are presumably subject to infall on a time-scale

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Clarke, C., & Oey, M. S. (2002). Galactic porosity and a star formation threshold for the escape of ionizing radiation from galaxies. Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 337(4), 1299–1308. https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1365-8711.2002.05976.x

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