Star formation laws in Luminous Infrared Galaxies. New observational constraints on models
S. Garcia-Burillo (1), A. Usero (1), A. Alonso-Herrero (2,3), J., Gracia-Carpio (4), M. Pereira-Santaella (2), L. Colina (2), P. Planesas (1,5), and S. Arribas (2) ((1) OAN-Spain, (2) CAB-CSIC-Spain, (3) IFCA-CSIC-Spain,, (4) MPI-Garching-Germany, (5) ESO-ALMA, Chile)

TL;DR
This study investigates star formation laws in luminous infrared galaxies, revealing a higher efficiency in extreme starbursts and supporting models where star formation efficiency depends on local free-fall times and dense gas tracers.
Contribution
It provides new high-quality observations of dense molecular gas in LIRGs, demonstrating a duality in star formation laws and testing theoretical models against these data.
Findings
Star formation efficiency in dense gas is 3-4 times higher in extreme starbursts.
A duality in Kennicutt-Schmidt laws is confirmed when accounting for conversion factors.
Star formation efficiency can be modeled with a constant SFR-ff of 0.005-0.01, fitting observations.
Abstract
The observational study of star formation relations in galaxies is central to unraveling the physical processes at work on local and global scales. We wish to expand the sample of extreme starbursts, represented by local LIRGs and ULIRGs, with high quality observations in the 1-0 line of HCN. We study if a universal law can account for the star formation relations observed for the dense molecular gas in normal star forming galaxies and extreme starbursts. We have used the IRAM 30m telescope to observe a sample of 19 LIRGs in the 1-0 lines of CO, HCN and HCO+. The analysis of the new data proves that the efficiency of star formation in the dense molecular gas (SFE-dense) of extreme starbursts is a factor 3-4 higher compared to normal galaxies. We find a duality in Kennicutt-Schmidt (KS) laws that is reinforced if we account for the different conversion factor for HCN (alpha-HCN) in…
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.
Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Spectroscopy and Laser Applications
