Environmental Dependence of the Kennicutt-Schmidt Relation in Galaxies
Nickolay Y. Gnedin, Andrey V. Kravtsov

TL;DR
This paper investigates how the Kennicutt-Schmidt relation varies with environmental factors like dust-to-gas ratio and UV flux in galaxy formation, revealing that these factors significantly influence star formation patterns and the atomic-to-molecular transition.
Contribution
It introduces a phenomenological H2 formation model based on molecular gas density, avoiding arbitrary thresholds, and provides parameterizations for environmental dependencies in galaxy evolution simulations.
Findings
Atomic-to-molecular transition shifts with dust and UV flux.
Steeper KS relation in low dust, high UV environments.
Model parameters enable improved galaxy evolution modeling.
Abstract
We present a detailed description of a phenomenological H2 formation model and local star formation prescription based on the density of molecular (rather than total) gas. Such approach allows us to avoid the arbitrary density and temperature thresholds typically used in star formation recipes. We present results of the model based on realistic cosmological simulations of high-z galaxy formation for a grid of numerical models with varied dust-to-gas ratios and interstellar far UV (FUV) fluxes. Our results show that both the atomic-to-molecular transition on small, ~10 pc scales and the Kennicutt-Schmidt (KS) relation on ~kpc scales are sensititive to the dust-to-gas ratio and the FUV flux. The atomic-to-molecular transition as a function of gas density or column density has a large scatter but is rather sharp and shifts to higher densities with decreasing dust-to-gas ratio and/or…
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