Star formation in the extended gaseous disk of the isolated galaxy CIG 96
D. Espada, J. C. Munoz-Mateos, A. Gil de Paz, J. Sabater, S. Boissier,, S. Verley, E. Athanassoula, A. Bosma, S. Leon, L. Verdes-Montenegro, M. Yun, and J. Sulentic

TL;DR
This study investigates star formation laws and efficiency in the extended atomic gas disk of galaxy CIG 96, revealing a decreasing Kennicutt-Schmidt index with radius and a constant star formation efficiency in the outskirts.
Contribution
It provides new high-resolution UV and HI observations of an isolated galaxy's extended disk, analyzing star formation laws and efficiencies at large radii, which is less explored in prior work.
Findings
Kennicutt-Schmidt index decreases from ~3.0 to 1.6 with radius.
Star formation efficiency remains nearly constant (~10^-11 yr^-1) beyond 1.5 times the optical radius.
Outer disk regions show ongoing star formation with low surface densities.
Abstract
We study the Kennicutt-Schmidt star formation law and efficiency in the gaseous disk of the isolated galaxy CIG 96 (NGC 864), with special emphasis on its unusually large atomic gas (HI) disk (r_HI/r_25 = 3.5, r_25 = 1.'85). We present deep GALEX near and far ultraviolet observations, used as a recent star formation tracer, and we compare them with new, high resolution (16", or 1.6 kpc) VLA HI observations. The UV and HI maps show good spatial correlation outside the inner 1', where the HI phase dominates over H_2. Star-forming regions in the extended gaseous disk are mainly located along the enhanced HI emission within two (relatively) symmetric giant gaseous spiral arm-like features, which emulate a HI pseudo-ring at a r \simeq 3' . Inside such structure, two smaller gaseous spiral arms extend from the NE and SW of the optical disk and connect to the previously mentioned HI…
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