The Atomic to Molecular Transition and its Relation to the Scaling Properties of Galaxy Disks in the Local Universe
Jian Fu, Qi Guo, Guinevere Kauffmann, Mark R. Krumholz

TL;DR
This paper develops semi-analytic models to understand the atomic to molecular gas transition in galaxy disks, linking gas phases to galaxy properties and comparing with observations.
Contribution
It introduces new prescriptions for molecular gas formation and star formation laws, integrating them into galaxy formation models based on the Millennium Simulation.
Findings
Models reproduce observed gas and star profiles in nearby galaxies.
Gas phase ratios depend on halo mass, spin, and accretion history.
Star formation correlates with molecular gas surface density.
Abstract
We extend existing semi-analytic models of galaxy formation to track atomic and molecular gas in disk galaxies. Simple recipes for processes such as cooling, star formation, supernova feedback, and chemical enrichment of the stars and gas are grafted on to dark matter halo merger trees derived from the Millennium Simulation. Each galactic disk is represented by a series of concentric rings. We assume that surface density profile of infalling gas in a dark matter halo is exponential, with scale radius r_d that is proportional to the virial radius of the halo times its spin parameter . As the dark matter haloes grow through mergers and accretion, disk galaxies assemble from the inside out. We include two simple prescriptions for molecular gas formation processes in our models: one is based on the analytic calculations by Krumholz, McKee & Tumlinson (2008), and the other is a…
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