The Super-linear Slope of the Spatially-Resolved Star Formation Law in NGC 3521 and NGC 5194 (M51a)
Guilin Liu (UMass), Jin Koda (Stony Brook), Daniela Calzetti (UMass),, Masayuki Fukuhara (U of Tokyo), Rieko Momose (U of Tokyo, NAO of Japan)

TL;DR
This study investigates the spatially-resolved star formation law in two spiral galaxies, revealing a super-linear molecular Schmidt-Kennicutt law at high resolution and its dependence on spatial scale, with implications for galaxy star formation models.
Contribution
The paper presents a pixel-by-pixel analysis of the star formation law in NGC 3521 and M51a, demonstrating the scale-dependent super-linear relation and emphasizing the importance of background subtraction.
Findings
Molecular S-K law index is 1.5-1.9 at 230 pc resolution.
The S-K law slope decreases with lower resolution.
The relation between S-K law parameters and scale is consistent across galaxies.
Abstract
We have conducted interferometric observations with CARMA and an OTF mapping with the 45-m telescope at NRO in the CO (J=1-0) emission line of NGC 3521. Combining these new data, together with CARMA+NRO45 data for M51a and archival SINGS H, 24m, THINGS H I and GALEX FUV data for both galaxies, we investigate the empirical scaling law that connects the surface density of SFR and cold gas (the Schmidt-Kennicutt law) on a spatially-resolved basis. We argue that plausibly deriving SFR maps of nearby galaxies requires the diffuse stellar/dust background emission to be carefully subtracted. An approach to complete this task is presented and applied in our pixel-by-pixel analysis on both galaxies, showing that the controversial results whether the molecular S-K law is super-linear or basically linear is a result of removing or preserving the local background. In both galaxies, the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSpectroscopy and Laser Applications · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Adaptive optics and wavefront sensing
