On the relation between the Schmidt and Kennicutt-Schmidt star formation laws and its implications for numerical simulations
Joop Schaye, Claudio Dalla Vecchia (Leiden)

TL;DR
This paper develops analytic relations linking surface and volume star formation laws, enabling their implementation in simulations without tuning, and tests these relations with high-resolution galaxy simulations.
Contribution
It introduces a framework to incorporate observed star formation laws into simulations using observable parameters, bypassing the need for tuning and addressing resolution limitations.
Findings
Successfully reproduces observed star formation thresholds.
Accurately matches the slope and normalization of input KS laws.
Works with various effective equations of state and galaxy stability conditions.
Abstract
When averaged over large scales, star formation in galaxies is observed to follow the empirical Kennicutt-Schmidt (KS) law for surface densities above a constant threshold. While the observed law involves surface densities, theoretical models and simulations generally work with volume density laws (i.e. Schmidt laws). We derive analytic relations between star formation laws expressed in terms of surface densities, volume densities, and pressures and we show how these relations depend on parameters such as the effective equation of state of the multiphase interstellar medium. Our analytic relations enable us to implement observed surface density laws into simulations. Because the parameters of our prescription for star formation are observables, we are not free to tune them to match the observations. We test our theoretical framework using high-resolution simulations of isolated disc…
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