The State of the Gas and the Relation Between Gas and Star Formation at Low Metallicity: the Small Magellanic Cloud
Alberto D. Bolatto, Adam K. Leroy, Katherine Jameson, Eve Ostriker,, Karl Gordon, Brandon Lawton, Snezana Stanimirovic, Frank P. Israel, Suzanne, C. Madden, Sacha Hony, Karin M. Sandstrom, Caroline Bot, Monica Rubio, P., Frank Winkler, Julia Roman-Duval, Jacco Th. van Loon

TL;DR
This study examines the gas composition and star formation in the Small Magellanic Cloud, revealing how low metallicity influences molecular gas formation and star formation efficiency across different spatial scales.
Contribution
It introduces a dust-based method to map molecular gas independent of CO emission, and evaluates models explaining star formation in low-metallicity environments.
Findings
Molecular gas depletion time is ~1.6 Gyr on 200 pc to 1 kpc scales.
The SMC has a 5-10 times lower molecular gas fraction than large spirals.
A combined thermal, dynamical, and photodissociation model reproduces observations.
Abstract
We compare atomic gas, molecular gas, and the recent star formation rate (SFR) inferred from H-alpha in the Small Magellanic Cloud (SMC). By using infrared dust emission and local dust-to-gas ratios, we construct a map of molecular gas that is independent of CO emission. This allows us to disentangle conversion factor effects from the impact of metallicity on the formation and star formation efficiency of molecular gas. On scales of 200 pc to 1 kpc we find a characteristic molecular gas depletion time of ~1.6 Gyr, similar to that observed in the molecule-rich parts of large spiral galaxies on similar spatial scales. This depletion time shortens on much larger scales to ~0.6 Gyr because of the presence of a diffuse H-alpha component, and lengthens on much smaller scales to ~7.5 Gyr because the H-alpha and H2 distributions differ in detail. We estimate the systematic uncertainties in our…
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