How Universal is the SFR - H2 Relation?
R. Feldmann, N. Y. Gnedin, A. V. Kravtsov

TL;DR
This study uses hydrodynamical simulations to explore how the relation between star formation rate surface density and molecular hydrogen surface density varies with environmental factors like metallicity and radiation, and how scale affects scatter.
Contribution
It demonstrates that the Sigma_SFR-Sigma_H2 relation varies with environment and scale, highlighting the importance of metallicity, radiation, and time-averaging in understanding star formation.
Findings
Relation is steeper in low metallicity/high radiation environments.
Star formation rate at fixed H2 is higher in such environments.
Scale-dependent scatter increases with decreasing averaging scale.
Abstract
It is a well established empirical fact that the surface density of the star formation rate, Sigma_SFR, strongly correlates with the surface density of molecular hydrogen, Sigma_H2, at least when averaged over large (~kpc) scales. Much less is known, however, if (and how) the Sigma_SFR-Sigma_H2 relation depends on environmental parameters, such as the metallicity or the UV radiation field in the interstellar medium (ISM). Furthermore, observations indicate that the scatter in the Sigma_SFR-Sigma_H2 relation increases rapidly with decreasing averaging scale. How the scale-dependent scatter is generated and how one recovers a tight ~ kpc scale Sigma_SFR-Sigma_H2 relation in the first place is still largely debated. Here, these questions are explored with hydrodynamical simulations that follow the formation and destruction of H2, include radiative transfer of UV radiation, and resolve the…
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