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Promotionskolloquium |
Kartik Rajan Neralwar
| SCHEDULED |
Max-Planck-Institut für Radioastronomie
The interstellar medium (ISM) is a turbulent, multi-phase medium with a
hierarchical structure consisting of molecular clouds (MCs), clumps,
and
cores. Stars form in dense cores and, over their evolution, inject
mass, momentum, and energy back into the ISM through stellar feedback
processes. I will present a systematic study of the interactions
between
stellar feedback and molecular gas structures across different spatial
scales and evolutionary stages, using the STARFORGE simulations. These
simulations follow the evolution of individual giant molecular clouds,
while self-consistently modelling protostellar outflows, stellar winds,
radiation and supernovae. I will begin by examining the impact of
individual feedback mechanisms on high-resolution gas cores identified
in the simulated gas density maps. I will then describe the use
synthetic 13CO observations to study the evolution of MCs under the
influence of stellar feedback as they would appear in observational
surveys such as SEDIGISM. Following this, I will introduce a new
pipeline developed to track clumps over time capturing their changes,
fragmentation and mergers. Finally, I will present deep-learning based
results demonstrating how neural networks trained on synthetic data can
identify feedback signatures in real observations. Together, these
projects provide a framework for interpreting observed trends in the
molecular cloud properties, identifying the observational signatures of
stellar feedback in molecular gas, and tracing the time evolution of
molecular gas structures in galaxies.