The relation between atomic gas and star formation rate densities in faint irregular galaxies
Sambit Roychowdhury, Jayaram N. Chengalur, Serafim S. Kaisin, Igor, D. Karachentsev

TL;DR
This study investigates the correlation between atomic gas density and star formation rates in faint dwarf irregular galaxies, revealing a nearly linear relation and shorter gas consumption timescales than in spiral galaxy outskirts.
Contribution
It provides new insights into star formation in molecule-poor, faint dwarf irregular galaxies and quantifies their gas consumption timescales, extending understanding beyond spiral galaxy regions.
Findings
Nearly linear relation between Sigma_gas,atomic and Sigma_SFR.
Gas consumption timescale ~10 Gyr for star-forming disks.
Global gas consumption timescale ~18 Gyr, intermediate between spiral regions.
Abstract
We use data for faint (M_B > -14.5) dwarf irregular galaxies drawn from the FIGGS survey to study the correlation between the atomic gas density (Sigma_gas,atomic) and star formation rate (Sigma_SFR) in the galaxies. The estimated gas phase metallicity of our sample galaxies is Z ~ 0.1 Z_sun. Understanding star formation in such molecule poor gas is of particular importance since it is likely to be of direct relevance to simulations of early galaxy formation. For about 20% (9/43) of our sample galaxies, we find that the HI distribution is significantly disturbed, with little correspondence between the optical and HI distributions. We exclude these galaxies from the comparison. We also exclude galaxies with very low star formation rates, for which stochastic effects make it difficult to estimate the true star formation rates. For the remaining galaxies we compute the Sigma_gas,atomic and…
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