A Study of the Gas-Star Formation Relation over Cosmic Time
R.Genzel, L.J.Tacconi, J.Gracia-Carpio, A.Sternberg, M.C.Cooper,, K.Shapiro, A.Bolatto, N.Bouche, F.Bournaud, A.Burkert, F.Combes, J.Comerford,, P.Cox, M.Davis, N.M. Foerster Schreiber, S.Garcia-Burillo, D.Lutz, T.Naab,, R.Neri, A.Omont, A.Shapley, B.Weiner

TL;DR
This study compares molecular gas and star formation rates in galaxies across cosmic time, revealing similar relations at different redshifts and highlighting the role of dynamical effects in star formation efficiency.
Contribution
It provides the first systematic comparison of CO emission in z~1-3 galaxies, showing consistent gas-star formation relations and emphasizing the impact of galaxy dynamics on star formation efficiency.
Findings
Gas depletion time increases from 0.5 Gyr at z~2 to 1.5 Gyr at z~0.
Star formation relations are similar across redshifts when accounting for dynamical times.
Mergers have higher star formation efficiencies due to more rapid gas cloud compression.
Abstract
We use the first systematic data sets of CO molecular line emission in z~1-3 normal star forming galaxies for a comparison of the dependence of galaxy-averaged star formation rates on molecular gas masses at low and high redshifts, and in different galactic environments. Although the current high-z samples are still small and biased toward the luminous and massive tail of the actively star-forming 'main-sequence', a fairly clear picture is emerging. Independent of whether galaxy integrated quantities or surface densities are considered, low- and high-z SFG galaxy populations appear to follow similar molecular gas-star formation relations with slopes 1.1 to 1.2. The gas-depletion time scale in these SFGs grows from 0.5 Gyrs at z~2 to 1.5 Gyrs at z~0. Because star formation depletion times are significantly smaller than the Hubble time at all redshifts sampled, star formation rates and…
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