Galactic winds and bubbles from nuclear starburst rings (2205.13465v2)
Abstract: Galactic outflows from local starburst galaxies typically exhibit a layered geometry, with cool $104\,$K flow sheathing a hotter $107\,$K, cylindrically-collimated, X-ray emitting plasma. Here, we argue that winds driven by energy-injection in a ring-like geometry can produce this distinctive large-scale multi-phase morphology. The ring configuration is motivated by the observation that massive young star clusters are often distributed in a ring at the host galaxy's inner Lindblad resonance, where larger-scale spiral arm structure terminates. We present parameterized three-dimensional radiative hydrodynamical simulations that follow the emergence and dynamics of energy-driven hot winds from starburst rings. In this Letter, we show that the flow shocks on itself within the inner ring hole, maintaining high $107$\,K temperatures, whilst flows that emerge from the wind-driving ring unobstructed can undergo rapid bulk cooling down to $104\,$K, producing a fast hot bi-conical outflow enclosed by a sheath of cooler nearly co-moving material without ram-pressure acceleration. The hot flow is collimated along the ring axis, even in the absence of pressure confinement from a galactic disk or magnetic fields. In the early stages of expansion, the emerging wind forms a bubble-like shape reminiscent of the Milky Way's eROSITA and Fermi bubbles and can reach velocities usually associated with AGN-driven winds. We discuss the physics of the ring configuration, the conditions for radiative bulk cooling, and the implications for future X-ray observations.
Sponsored by Paperpile, the PDF & BibTeX manager trusted by top AI labs.
Get 30 days freePaper Prompts
Sign up for free to create and run prompts on this paper using GPT-5.
Top Community Prompts
Collections
Sign up for free to add this paper to one or more collections.