We present magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) simulations of the star-forming
multiphase interstellar medium (ISM) in stratified galactic patches with gas
surface densities Σgas= 10, 30, 50, and 100
M⊙pc−2. The SILCC project simulation framework accounts
for non-equilibrium thermal and chemical processes in the warm and cold ISM.
The sink-based star formation and feedback model includes stellar winds,
hydrogen-ionising UV radiation, core-collapse supernovae, and cosmic ray (CR)
injection and diffusion. The simulations follow the observed relation between
Σgas and the star formation rate surface density
ΣSFR. CRs qualitatively change the outflow phase structure.
Without CRs, the outflows transition from a two-phase (warm and hot at 1 kpc)
to a single-phase (hot at 2 kpc) structure. With CRs, the outflow always has
three phases (cold, warm, and hot), dominated in mass by the warm phase. The
impact of CRs on mass loading decreases for higher Σgas and
the mass loading factors of the CR-supported outflows are of order unity
independent of ΣSFR. Similar to observations, vertical
velocity dispersions of the warm ionised medium (WIM) and the cold neutral
medium (CNM) correlate with the star formation rate as σz∝ΣSFRa, with a∼0.20. In the absence of stellar
feedback, we find no correlation. The velocity dispersion of the WIM is a
factor ∼2.2 higher than that of the CNM, in agreement with local
observations. For ΣSFR≳1.5×10−2M⊙yr−1kpc−2 the WIM motions
become supersonic.Comment: 19 pages, 9 figures, submitted to MNRA