The X-factor in Galaxies: II. The molecular hydrogen -- star formation relation
Robert Feldmann, Nickolay Y. Gnedin, Andrey V. Kravtsov

TL;DR
This study uses cosmological simulations to analyze the molecular hydrogen and star formation rate relation, revealing scale-dependent behaviors and the impact of observational tracers like CO emission.
Contribution
It introduces a stochastic star formation model in simulations that accurately reproduces observed relations and clarifies the effects of observational biases on measuring the relation.
Findings
Simulations match observed Kennicutt-Schmidt and Sigma_H2-Sigma_SFR relations.
CO emission poorly traces the relation at low H2 surface densities.
Scatter at sub-kpc scales mainly due to star formation discreteness.
Abstract
There is ample observational evidence that the star formation rate (SFR) surface density, Sigma_SFR, is closely correlated with the surface density of molecular hydrogen, Sigma_H2. This empirical relation holds both for galaxy-wide averages and for individual >=kpc sized patches of the interstellar medium (ISM), but appears to degrade substantially at a sub-kpc scale. Identifying the physical mechanisms that determine the scale-dependent properties of the observed Sigma_H2-Sigma_SFR relation remains a challenge from a theoretical perspective. To address this question, we analyze the slope and scatter of the Sigma_H2-Sigma_SFR relation using a set of cosmological, galaxy formation simulations with a peak resolution of ~100 pc. These simulations include a chemical network for molecular hydrogen, a model for the CO emission, and a simple, stochastic prescription for star formation that…
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