SIMBAD references

2011ApJ...731...91L - Astrophys. J., 731, 91 (2011/April-3)

What drives the expansion of giant H II regions?: a study of stellar feedback in 30 Doradus.

LOPEZ L.A., KRUMHOLZ M.R., BOLATTO A.D., PROCHASKA J.X. and RAMIREZ-RUIZ E.

Abstract (from CDS):

Observations show that star formation is an inefficient and slow process. This result can be attributed to the injection of energy and momentum by stars that prevents free-fall collapse of molecular clouds. The mechanism of this stellar feedback is debated theoretically; possible sources of pressure include the classical warm H II gas, the hot gas generated by shock heating from stellar winds and supernovae, direct radiation of stars, and the dust-processed radiation field trapped inside the H II shell. In this paper, we measure observationally the pressures associated with each component listed above across the giant H II region 30 Doradus in the Large Magellanic Cloud. We exploit high-resolution, multi-wavelength images (radio, infrared, optical, ultraviolet, and X-ray) to map these pressures as a function of position. We find that radiation pressure dominates within 75 pc of the central star cluster, R136, while the H II gas pressure dominates at larger radii. By contrast, the dust-processed radiation pressure and hot gas pressure are generally weak and not dynamically important, although the hot gas pressure may have played a more significant role at early times. Based on the low X-ray gas pressures, we demonstrate that the hot gas is only partially confined and must be leaking out the H II shell. Additionally, we consider the implications of a dominant radiation pressure on the early dynamics of 30 Doradus.

Abstract Copyright:

Journal keyword(s): galaxies: star clusters: general - H II regions - ISM: individual: 30 Doradus - ISM: kinematics and dynamics - stars: formation - stars: massive

Simbad objects: 18

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