Environmental effects on star formation in dwarf galaxies and star clusters
S. Pasetto, M. Cropper, Y. Fujita, C. Chiosi, E.K. Grebel

TL;DR
This paper presents an analytical criterion to assess how external environmental factors influence the initiation of star formation in dwarf galaxies and star clusters, with applications to various astrophysical systems.
Contribution
The authors develop a novel analytical formalism linking fluid instabilities to star formation, applicable to diverse orbits and environments in astrophysical systems.
Findings
Derived a threshold criterion for star formation onset based on mass and size.
Provided analytical dependencies of instability phenomena affecting star formation.
Demonstrated applicability to dwarf galaxies in clusters and orbiting the Milky Way.
Abstract
We develop a simple analytical criterion to investigate the role of the environment on the onset of star formation. We will consider the main external agents that influence the star formation (i.e. ram pressure, tidal interaction, Rayleigh-Taylor and Kelvin-Helmholtz instabilities) in a spherical galaxy moving through an external environment. The theoretical framework developed here has direct applications to the cases of dwarf galaxies in galaxy clusters and dwarf galaxies orbiting our Milky Way system, as well as any primordial gas-rich cluster of stars orbiting within its host galaxy. We develop an analytic formalism to solve the fluid dynamics equations in a non-inertial reference frame mapped with spherical coordinates. The two-fluids instability at the interface between a stellar system and its surrounding hotter and less dense environment is related to the star formation…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena
