Oxford University Press (OUP), Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 1(492), p. 79-95, 2019
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ABSTRACT A suite of idealized, global, gravitationally unstable, star-forming galactic disc simulations with 2 pc spatial resolution, performed with the adaptive mesh refinement code ramses, is used in this paper to predict the emergent effects of supernova feedback. The simulations include a simplified prescription for the formation of single stellar populations of mass $∼ 100 \, {\rm M}_{⊙ }$, radiative cooling, photoelectric heating, an external gravitational potential for a dark matter halo and an old stellar disc, self-gravity, and a novel implementation of supernova feedback. The results of these simulations show that gravitationally unstable discs can generate violent supersonic winds with mass-loading factors η ≳ 10, followed by a galactic fountain phase. These violent winds are generated by highly clustered supernovae exploding in dense environments created by gravitational instability, and they are not produced in simulation without self-gravity. The violent winds significantly perturb the vertical structure of the disc, which is later re-established during the galactic fountain phase. Gas resettles into a quasi-steady, highly turbulent disc with volume-weighted velocity dispersion $σ \gt 50 \, {\rm km\, s}^{-1}$. The new configuration drives weaker galactic winds with a mass-loading factor η ≤ 0.1. The whole cycle takes place in ≤10 dynamical times. Such high time variability needs to be taken into account when interpreting observations of galactic winds from starburst and post-starburst galaxies.