4.6 Article

The Single-cloud Star Formation Relation

期刊

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL LETTERS
卷 912, 期 1, 页码 -

出版社

IOP Publishing Ltd
DOI: 10.3847/2041-8213/abf564

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资金

  1. NASA ADAP awards [NNX11AD14G, NNX13AF08G, NNX15AF05G, 80NSSC18K1564, NNX17AF24G]
  2. Australian Research Council [FT180100375, DP190101258, DP170100603, FT180100495, CE170100013]
  3. NSF CAREER [1748571]
  4. NASA
  5. NASA through JPL/Caltech
  6. NASA [NNX15AF05G, 804838] Funding Source: Federal RePORTER
  7. Direct For Mathematical & Physical Scien
  8. Division Of Astronomical Sciences [1748571] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The Kennicutt-Schmidt relation in astronomy explores the correlation between interstellar gas density and star formation rate. Recent research using young stellar object catalogs and gas column density maps within molecular clouds has revealed a nearly constant star formation efficiency, suggesting that star formation may be regulated by local processes rather than galaxy-wide properties.
One of the most important and well-established empirical results in astronomy is the Kennicutt-Schmidt relation between the density of interstellar gas and the rate at which that gas forms stars. A tight correlation between these quantities has long been measured at galactic scales. More recently, using surveys of YSOs, a KS relationship has been found within molecular clouds relating the surface density of star formation to the surface density of gas; however, the scaling of these laws varies significantly from cloud to cloud. In this Letter, we use a recently developed, high-accuracy catalog of young stellar objects from Spitzer combined with high-dynamic-range gas column density maps of 12 nearby (<1.5 kpc) molecular clouds from Herschel to re-examine the KS relation within individual molecular clouds. We find a tight, linear correlation between clouds' star formation rate per unit area and their gas surface density normalized by the gas freefall time. The measured intracloud KS relation, which relates star formation rate to the volume density, extends over more than two orders of magnitude within each cloud and is nearly identical in each of the 12 clouds, implying a constant star formation efficiency per freefall time epsilon (ff) approximate to 0.026. The finding of a universal correlation within individual molecular clouds, including clouds that contain no massive stars or massive stellar feedback, favors models in which star formation is regulated by local processes such as turbulence or stellar feedback such as protostellar outflows, and disfavors models in which star formation is regulated only by galaxy properties or supernova feedback on galactic scales.

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