Star formation efficiencies of molecular clouds in a galactic center environment
Erik Bertram, Simon C. O. Glover, Paul C. Clark, Ralf S. Klessen

TL;DR
This study uses simulations to investigate why star formation efficiency in galactic center molecular clouds is low, finding that turbulence and external heating alone do not fully explain the observed inefficiency.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the effects of extreme environmental conditions on star formation efficiency in galactic centers through detailed simulations.
Findings
Increasing virial parameter reduces SFE by a factor of 4-10.
Higher ISRF/CRF decreases SFE by a factor of 2-6.
Simulated clouds still form stars faster than observed in real GC clouds.
Abstract
We use the Arepo moving mesh code to simulate the evolution of molecular clouds exposed to a harsh environment similar to that found in the galactic center (GC), in an effort to understand why the star formation efficiency (SFE) of clouds in this environment is so small. Our simulations include a simplified treatment of time-dependent chemistry and account for the highly non-isothermal nature of the gas and the dust. We model clouds with a total mass of 1.3x10^5 M_{sun} and explore the effects of varying the mean cloud density and the virial parameter, alpha = E_{kin}/|E_{pot}|. We vary the latter from alpha = 0.5 to alpha = 8.0, and so many of the clouds that we simulate are gravitationally unbound. We expose our model clouds to an interstellar radiation field (ISRF) and cosmic ray flux (CRF) that are both a factor of 1000 higher than the values found in the solar neighbourhood. As a…
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