A MOLECULAR STAR FORMATION LAW IN THE ATOMIC-GAS-DOMINATED REGIME IN NEARBY GALAXIES

被引:455
作者
Schruba, Andreas [1 ]
Leroy, Adam K. [2 ]
Walter, Fabian [1 ]
Bigiel, Frank [3 ]
Brinks, Elias [4 ]
de Blok, W. J. G. [5 ]
Dumas, Gaelle [1 ]
Kramer, Carsten [6 ]
Rosolowsky, Erik [7 ]
Sandstrom, Karin [1 ]
Schuster, Karl [8 ]
Usero, Antonio [9 ]
Weiss, Axel [10 ]
Wiesemeyer, Helmut [10 ]
机构
[1] Max Planck Inst Astron, D-69117 Heidelberg, Germany
[2] Natl Radio Astron Observ, Charlottesville, VA 22903 USA
[3] Univ Calif Berkeley, Radio Astron Lab, Dept Astron, Berkeley, CA 94720 USA
[4] Univ Hertfordshire, Ctr Astrophys Res, Hatfield AL10 9AB, Herts, England
[5] Univ Cape Town, Dept Astron, Astrophys Cosmol & Grav Ctr, ZA-7701 Rondebosch, South Africa
[6] IRAM, E-18012 Granada, Spain
[7] Univ British Columbia Okanagan, Dept Phys & Astron, Kelowna, BC V1V 1V7, Canada
[8] IRAM, F-38406 St Martin Dheres, France
[9] Observ Astron Nacl, Madrid 28014, Spain
[10] MPIfR, D-53121 Bonn, Germany
基金
新加坡国家研究基金会;
关键词
galaxies: evolution; galaxies: ISM; radio lines: galaxies; stars: formation; FORMATION RATE INDICATORS; LARGE-MAGELLANIC-CLOUD; INITIAL MASS FUNCTION; (CO)-C-12 2-1 MAP; SPIRAL GALAXIES; FORMATION RATES; LOCAL UNIVERSE; GALACTIC DISKS; RADIAL-DISTRIBUTION; DEPLETION TIME;
D O I
10.1088/0004-6256/142/2/37
中图分类号
P1 [天文学];
学科分类号
0704 ;
摘要
We use the IRAM HERACLES survey to study CO emission from 33 nearby spiral galaxies down to very low intensities. Using 21 cm line atomic hydrogen (H I) data, mostly from THINGS, we predict the local mean CO velocity based on the mean HI velocity. By re-normalizing the CO velocity axis so that zero corresponds to the local mean HI velocity we are able to stack spectra coherently over large regions. This enables us to measure CO intensities with high significance as low as I-CO approximate to 0.3 K km s(-1) (Sigma(H2) approximate to 1 M-circle dot pc(-2)), an improvement of about one order of magnitude over previous studies. We detect CO out to galactocentric radii r(gal) similar to r(25) and find the CO radial profile to follow a remarkably uniform exponential decline with a scale length of similar to 0.2 r(25). Here we focus on stacking as a function of radius, comparing our sensitive CO profiles to matched profiles of HI, H alpha, far-UV (FUV), and Infrared (IR) emission at 24 mu m and 70 mu m. We observe a tight, roughly linear relationship between CO and IR intensity that does not show any notable break between regions that are dominated by molecular gas (Sigma(H2) > Sigma(HI)) and those dominated by atomic gas (Sigma(H2) < Sigma(HI)). We use combinations of FUV+ 24 mu m and H alpha + 24 mu m to estimate the recent star formation rate (SFR) surface density, Sigma(SFR), and find approximately linear relations between Sigma(SFR) and Sigma(H2). We interpret this as evidence of stars forming in molecular gas with little dependence on the local total gas surface density. While galaxies display small internal variations in the SFR-to-H-2 ratio, we do observe systematic galaxy-to-galaxy variations. These galaxy-to-galaxy variations dominate the scatter in relationships between CO and SFR tracers measured at large scales. The variations have the sense that less massive galaxies exhibit larger ratios of SFR-to-CO than massive galaxies. Unlike the SFR-to-CO ratio, the balance between atomic and molecular gas depends strongly on the total gas surface density and galactocentric radius. It must also depend on additional parameters. Our results reinforce and extend to lower surface densities, a picture in which star formation in galaxies can be separated into two processes: the assembly of star-forming molecular clouds and the formation of stars from H-2. The interplay between these processes yields a total gas-SFR relation with a changing slope, which has previously been observed and identified as a star formation threshold.
引用
收藏
页数:25
相关论文
共 71 条
[1]   THE STAR FORMATION LAW IN NEARBY GALAXIES ON SUB-KPC SCALES [J].
Bigiel, F. ;
Leroy, A. ;
Walter, F. ;
Brinks, E. ;
de Blok, W. J. G. ;
Madore, B. ;
Thornley, M. D. .
ASTRONOMICAL JOURNAL, 2008, 136 (06) :2846-2871
[2]   A CONSTANT MOLECULAR GAS DEPLETION TIME IN NEARBY DISK GALAXIES [J].
Bigiel, F. ;
Leroy, A. K. ;
Walter, F. ;
Brinks, E. ;
de Blok, W. J. G. ;
Kramer, C. ;
Rix, H. W. ;
Schruba, A. ;
Schuster, K. -F. ;
Usero, A. ;
Wiesemeyer, H. W. .
ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL LETTERS, 2011, 730 (02)
[3]   EXTREMELY INEFFICIENT STAR FORMATION IN THE OUTER DISKS OF NEARBY GALAXIES [J].
Bigiel, F. ;
Leroy, A. ;
Walter, F. ;
Blitz, L. ;
Brinks, E. ;
de Blok, W. J. G. ;
Madore, B. .
ASTRONOMICAL JOURNAL, 2010, 140 (05) :1194-1213
[4]   TIGHTLY CORRELATED Hi AND FUV EMISSION IN THE OUTSKIRTS OF M83 [J].
Bigiel, F. ;
Leroy, A. ;
Seibert, M. ;
Walter, F. ;
Blitz, L. ;
Thilker, D. ;
Madore, B. .
ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL LETTERS, 2010, 720 (01) :L31-L35
[5]   THE SPATIALLY RESOLVED STAR FORMATION LAW FROM INTEGRAL FIELD SPECTROSCOPY: VIRUS-P OBSERVATIONS OF NGC 5194 [J].
Blanc, Guillermo A. ;
Heiderman, Amanda ;
Gebhardt, Karl ;
Evans, Neal J., II ;
Adams, Joshua .
ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL, 2009, 704 (01) :842-862
[6]   The role of pressure in giant molecular cloud formation [J].
Blitz, L ;
Rosolowsky, E .
ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL, 2004, 612 (01) :L29-L32
[7]   The role of pressure in GMC formation II:: The H2-pressure relation [J].
Blitz, Leo ;
Rosolowsky, Erik .
ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL, 2006, 650 (02) :933-944
[8]   A semianalytical model for the observational properties of the dominant carbon species at different metallicities [J].
Bolatto, AD ;
Jackson, JM ;
Ingalls, JG .
ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL, 1999, 513 (01) :275-286
[9]  
Boulanger F, 1996, ASTRON ASTROPHYS, V312, P256
[10]   ISM properties in hydrodynamic galaxy simulations: turbulence cascades, cloud formation, role of gravity and feedback [J].
Bournaud, Frederic ;
Elmegreen, Bruce G. ;
Teyssier, Romain ;
Block, David L. ;
Puerari, Ivanio .
MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY, 2010, 409 (03) :1088-1099