Regularity underlying complexity: a redshift-independent description of the continuous variation of galaxy-scale molecular gas properties in the mass-star formation rate plane
Mark T. Sargent, E. Daddi, M. B\'ethermin, H. Aussel, G. Magdis, H. S., Hwang, S. Juneau, D. Elbaz, E. da Cunha

TL;DR
This paper introduces a redshift-independent framework to describe the continuous variation of molecular gas properties in star-forming galaxies, emphasizing the role of merging processes and gas fractions in starburst activity.
Contribution
It proposes the 2-Star Formation Mode (2-SFM) framework, revealing universal, redshift-independent patterns in star formation efficiency and gas fractions across galaxy populations.
Findings
Starburst galaxies' sSFR distribution results from merging-induced boosting.
Variations in star formation efficiency scale supra-linearly with SFR increases.
Higher sSFR in distant galaxies is linked to larger gas fractions.
Abstract
Star-forming galaxies (SFGs) display a continuous distribution of specific star formation rates (sSFR) which can be approximated by the superposition of two log-normal distributions. The 1st of these encompasses the main sequence (MS) of SFGs, the 2nd one a rarer population of starbursts (SB). We show that the sSFR-distribution of SBs can be regarded as the result of a physical process (plausibly merging) taking the mathematical form of a log-normal boosting kernel and enhancing star formation activity. We explore the utility of splitting the star-forming population into MS and SB galaxies - an approach we term "2-Star Formation Mode" (2-SFM) framework - for understanding their molecular gas properties. Variations of star formation efficiency (SFE) and gas fractions among SFGs take a simple, redshift-independent form, once these quantities are normalized to the value of an average MS…
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