Star formation in metal-poor gas clouds
Simon C. O. Glover, Paul C. Clark

TL;DR
This study uses numerical simulations to explore how metallicity influences star formation in molecular clouds, revealing that star formation rates are relatively insensitive to metallicity, but chemical states and CO luminosities are highly affected.
Contribution
The paper demonstrates through simulations that star formation rates are largely unaffected by metallicity, challenging previous assumptions about metallicity's role.
Findings
Star formation rate is minimally affected by metallicity variations.
Chemical composition of clouds is highly sensitive to metallicity.
CO luminosity depends strongly on metallicity and is time-dependent.
Abstract
Observations of molecular clouds in metal-poor environments typically find that they have much higher star formation rates than one would expect based on their observed CO luminosities and the molecular gas masses that are inferred from them. This finding can be understood if one assumes that the conversion factor between CO luminosity and H2 mass is much larger in these low metallicity systems than in nearby molecular clouds. However, it is unclear whether this is the only factor at work, or whether the star formation rate of the clouds is directly sensitive to the metallicity of the gas. To investigate this, we have performed numerical simulations of the coupled dynamical, chemical and thermal evolution of model clouds with metallicities ranging from 0.01 Z_solar to Z_solar. We find that the star formation rate in our model clouds has little sensitivity to the metallicity. Reducing…
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