Star Formation Rates in Molecular Clouds and the Nature of the Extragalactic Scaling Relations
Charles J. Lada, Jan Forbrich, Marco Lombardi, and Joao F. Alves

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates a universal linear relation between star formation rates and dense molecular gas mass across local clouds and external galaxies, unifying different observed scaling laws.
Contribution
It establishes a fundamental empirical scaling law linking local star formation processes with galactic-scale relations, emphasizing the role of dense gas fraction.
Findings
Star formation rate is linearly proportional to dense gas mass.
Scaling laws are consistent across nine orders of magnitude in mass.
Unified framework connects galactic and local star formation relations.
Abstract
In this paper we investigate scaling relations between star formation rates and molecular gas masses for both local Galactic clouds and a sample of external galaxies. We specifically consider relations between the star formation rates and measurements of dense, as well as total, molecular gas masses. We argue that there is a fundamental empirical scaling relation that directly connects the local star formation process with that operating globally within galaxies. Specifically, the total star formation rate in a molecular cloud or galaxy is linearly proportional to the mass of dense gas within the cloud or galaxy. This simple relation, first documented in previous studies, holds over a span of mass covering nearly nine orders of magnitude and indicates that the rate of star formation is directly controlled by the amount of dense molecular gas that can be assembled within a star formation…
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