The Star Formation Efficiency in Nearby Galaxies: Measuring Where Gas Forms Stars Effectively
Adam K. Leroy (1), Fabian Walter (1), Elias Brinks (2), Frank Bigiel, (1), W.J.G. de Blok (3,4), Barry Madore (5), M. D. Thornley (6) ((1) Max, Planck Institute for Astronomy; (2) University of Hertfordshire; (3) Mount

TL;DR
This study measures star formation efficiency in 23 nearby galaxies, finding a nearly constant efficiency in molecular gas and a radial decline in atomic gas, highlighting environmental influences on GMC formation.
Contribution
It provides detailed measurements of SFE across different galactic environments and links the decline in atomic gas efficiency to GMC formation processes.
Findings
H2 SFE is nearly constant at ~5.25 x 10^{-10} yr^{-1} in spirals.
SFE decreases with radius in HI-dominated regions, following an exponential decline.
Radial SFE decline is too steep to be explained solely by free-fall or orbital times.
Abstract
We measure the star formation efficiency (SFE), the star formation rate per unit gas, in 23 nearby galaxies and compare it to expectations from proposed star formation laws and thresholds. We use HI maps from THINGS and derive H2 maps from HERACLES and BIMA SONG CO. We estimate the star formation rate by combining GALEX FUV maps and SINGS 24 micron maps, infer stellar surface density profiles from SINGS 3.6 micron data, and use kinematics from THINGS. We measure the SFE as a function of: the free-fall and orbital timescales; midplane gas pressure; stability of the gas disk to collapse (including the effects of stars); the ability of perturbations to grow despite shear; and the ability of a cold phase to form. In spirals, the SFE of H2 alone is nearly constant at 5.25 +/- 2.5 x 10^(-10) yr^(-1) (equivalent to an H2 depletion time of 1.9x10^9 yr) as a function of all of these variables at…
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