Star formation efficiency as a function of metallicity: from star clusters to galaxies
Sami Dib (1), Laurent Piau (2), Subhanjoy Mohanty (1), Jonathan Braine, (3) ((1) Imperial College London (2) Latmos (3) Bordeaux)

TL;DR
This study models how metallicity-dependent stellar winds from massive stars regulate star formation efficiency in protoclusters, revealing a strong inverse relation between metallicity and efficiency, with implications for galaxy evolution.
Contribution
It introduces a new model linking metallicity, stellar winds, and star formation efficiency, providing quantitative relations and prescriptions applicable across different galactic environments.
Findings
Star formation efficiency decreases exponentially with increasing metallicity.
Clump mass has negligible effect on the SFE-metallicity relation.
The model's SFE-metallicity relation aligns with galactic-scale observations.
Abstract
We explore how the star formation efficiency in a protocluster clump is regulated by metallicity dependent stellar winds from the newly formed massive OB stars (Mstar >5 Msol). The model describes the co-evolution of the mass function of gravitationally bound cores and of the IMF in a protocluster clump. Dense cores are generated uniformly in time at different locations in the clump, and contract over lifetimes that are a few times their free fall times. The cores collapse to form stars that power strong stellar winds whose cumulative kinetic energy evacuates the gas from the clump and quenches further core and star formation. This sets the final star formation efficiency, SFEf. Models are run with various metallicities in the range Z/Zsol=[0.1,2]. We find that the SFEf decreases strongly with increasing metallicity.The SFEf-metallicity relation is well described by a decaying…
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