Dense Cloud Formation and Star Formation in a Barred Galaxy
M. Nimori, A. Habe, K. Sorai, Y. Watanabe, A. Hirota, and D. Namekata

TL;DR
This study uses hydrodynamical simulations to analyze dense cloud formation and star formation in a barred galaxy, revealing environmental effects on cloud properties and star formation efficiency consistent with observations.
Contribution
It presents the first detailed simulation of dense cloud formation in a barred galaxy, incorporating radiative processes and self-gravity to study environmental impacts on star formation.
Findings
Clump properties resemble Galactic molecular clouds.
Virial parameters are higher in the bar region.
Star formation efficiency is lower in the bar compared to spiral arms.
Abstract
We investigate the properties of massive, dense clouds formed in a barred galaxy and their possible relation to star formation, performing a two-dimensional hydrodynamical simulation with the gravitational potential obtained from the 2Mass data from the barred spiral galaxy, M83. Since the environment for cloud formation and evolution in the bar region is expected to be different from that in the spiral arm region, barred galaxies are a good target to study the environmental effects on cloud formation and the subsequent star formation. Our simulation uses for an initial 80 Myr an isothermal flow of non-self gravitating gas in the barred potential, then including radiative cooling, heating and self-gravitation of the gas for the next 40 Myr, during which dense clumps are formed. We identify many cold, dense gas clumps for which the mass is more than (a value corresponding…
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