Molecular Star Formation Rate Indicators in Galaxies
Desika Narayanan (Arizona), Thomas J. Cox (CfA), Yancy Shirley, (Arizona), Romeel Dave (Arizona), Lars Hernquist (CfA), Christopher K. Walker, (Arizona)

TL;DR
This paper develops a physical model linking star formation rates in galaxies to molecular line emissions, explaining observed relations through gas density and excitation conditions, and predicts how different molecular lines trace star formation activity.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive model combining radiative transfer and hydrodynamics to interpret molecular line observations in terms of the underlying star formation law.
Findings
Low critical density lines trace gas density faithfully.
High critical density lines show superlinear luminosity relations.
At high SFRs, the SFR-line luminosity relation approaches the Schmidt law.
Abstract
We derive a physical model for the observed relations between star formation rate (SFR) and molecular line (CO and HCN) emission in galaxies, and show how these observed relations are reflective of the underlying star formation law. We do this by combining 3D non-LTE radiative transfer calculations with hydrodynamic simulations of isolated disk galaxies and galaxy mergers. We demonstrate that the observed SFR-molecular line relations are driven by the relationship between molecular line emission and gas density, and anchored by the index of the underlying Schmidt law controlling the SFR in the galaxy. Lines with low critical densities (e.g. CO J=1-0) are typically thermalized and trace the gas density faithfully. In these cases, the SFR will be related to line luminosity with an index similar to the Schmidt law index. Lines with high critical densities greater than the mean density of…
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