Studying the spatially resolved Schmidt-Kennicutt law in interacting galaxies: the case of Arp 158
M\'ed\'eric Boquien, Ute Lisenfeld, Pierre-Alain Duc, Jonathan Braine,, Fr\'ed\'eric Bournaud, Elias Brinks, and Vassilis Charmandaris

TL;DR
This study investigates how star formation laws vary across different regions in the interacting galaxy Arp 158, revealing that local conditions influence the applicability of the Schmidt-Kennicutt relation at sub-galactic scales.
Contribution
It provides the first spatially resolved analysis showing that different star-forming regions in a merger can follow distinct Schmidt-Kennicutt laws, highlighting the role of local interstellar medium physics.
Findings
Most regions follow the spiral galaxy KS law
Nuclear starburst deviates from the KS law
Tidal tails contain many young stars
Abstract
Recent studies have shown that star formation in mergers does not seem to follow the same Schmidt-Kennicutt (KS) relation as in spiral disks, presenting a higher star formation rate (SFR) for a given gas column density. In this paper we study why and how different models of star formation arise. To do so we examine the process of star formation in the interacting system Arp 158 and its tidal debris. We perform an analysis of the properties of specific regions of interest in Arp 158 using observations tracing the atomic and the molecular gas, star formation, the stellar populations as well as optical spectroscopy to determine their exact nature. We also fit their spectral energy distribution with an evolutionary synthesis code. Finally, we compare star formation in these objects to star formation in the disks of spiral galaxies and mergers. Abundant molecular gas is found throughout the…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
