The Relationship Between Molecular Gas and Star Formation in Low-Mass E/S0 Galaxies
Lisa H. Wei (1), Stuart N. Vogel (1), Sheila J. Kannappan (2), Andrew, J. Baker (3), David V. Stark (2), Seppo Laine (4) ((1) University of, Maryland, (2) University of North Carolina, (3) Rutgers University, (4), Spitzer Science Center)

TL;DR
This study investigates the connection between molecular gas and star formation in low-mass E/S0 galaxies, revealing that many exhibit high star formation efficiency and follow the same star formation laws as spiral galaxies, with some showing signs of recent or ongoing starbursts.
Contribution
It provides spatially resolved analysis of molecular gas and star formation in low-mass E/S0 galaxies, highlighting their varied star formation efficiencies and potential evolutionary states.
Findings
Most E/S0s have molecular-gas surface densities similar to spiral disks.
Approximately 80% of blue-sequence E/S0s show higher star formation efficiency.
Many E/S0s follow the Schmidt-Kennicutt relation, with some offset indicating elevated efficiency.
Abstract
We consider the relationship between molecular-gas and star-formation surface densities in 19 morphologically defined E/S0s with stellar mass <~ 4x10^10 M_sun, paying particular attention to those found on the blue sequence in color vs. stellar mass parameter space, where spiral galaxies typically reside. While some blue-sequence E/S0s must be young major-merger remnants, many low-mass blue-sequence E/S0s appear much less disturbed, and may be experiencing the milder starbursts associated with inner-disk building as spirals (re)grow. For a sample of eight E/S0s (four blue-, two mid-, and two red-sequence) whose CARMA CO(1-0), Spitzer MIPS 24um, and GALEX FUV emission distributions are spatially resolved on a 750pc scale, we find roughly linear relationships between molecular-gas and star-formation surface densities within all galaxies, with power law indices N = 0.6-1.9 (median 1.2).…
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