Extremely Inefficient Star Formation in the Outer Disks of Nearby Galaxies
F. Bigiel (1,2), A. Leroy (2,3), F. Walter (2), L. Blitz (1), E., Brinks (4), W.J.G. de Blok (5), B. Madore (6) ((1) UC Berkeley, (2) MPIA, Heidelberg, (3) NRAO, (4) Univ. of Hertfordshire, (5) Univ. of Cape Town, (6), Carnegie Observatories)

TL;DR
This study investigates the relationship between atomic hydrogen and star formation in the outer regions of nearby galaxies, revealing extremely inefficient star formation with long gas depletion times and a strong correlation with HI column density.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the low efficiency of star formation in galaxy outskirts and highlights the importance of HI column density as a key environmental factor.
Findings
Star formation efficiency decreases with radius in outer disks.
Gas depletion times exceed a Hubble time (~10^11 years).
FUV and HI intensities are spatially correlated, especially near r25.
Abstract
(Abridged) We combine data from The HI Nearby Galaxy Survey and the GALEX Nearby Galaxy Survey to study the relationship between atomic hydrogen (HI) and far-ultraviolet (FUV) emission outside the optical radius (r25) in 17 spiral and 5 dwarf galaxies. In this regime, HI is likely to represent most of the ISM and FUV emission to trace recent star formation with little bias due to extinction, so that the two quantities closely trace the underlying relationship between gas and star formation rate (SFR). The azimuthally averaged HI and FUV intensities both decline with increasing radius in this regime, with the scale length of the FUV profile typically half that of the HI profile. Despite the mismatch in profiles, there is a significant spatial correlation (at 15" resolution) between local FUV and HI intensities; near r25 this correlation is quite strong, in fact stronger than anywhere…
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