Variations in the Star Formation Efficiency of the Dense Molecular Gas across the Disks of Star-Forming Galaxies
Antonio Usero, Adam K. Leroy, Fabian Walter, Andreas Schruba, Santiago, Garc\'ia-Burillo, Karin Sandstrom, Frank Bigiel, Elias Brinks, Carsten, Kramer, Erik Rosolowsky, Karl-Friedrich Schuster, W. J. G. de Blok

TL;DR
This study investigates how the efficiency of star formation in dense molecular gas varies across galaxy disks, revealing systematic environmental influences that challenge simple density threshold models.
Contribution
It provides new observational evidence of the environmental dependence of dense gas fraction and star formation efficiency in galaxy disks, using HCN, CO, and IR data across multiple radii.
Findings
Dense gas fraction increases with stellar surface density.
Star formation efficiency of dense gas decreases towards galaxy centers.
Simple density threshold models are incompatible with observed variations.
Abstract
We present a new survey of HCN(1-0) emission, a tracer of dense molecular gas, focused on the little-explored regime of normal star-forming galaxy disks. Combining HCN, CO, and infrared (IR) emission, we investigate the role of dense gas in Star Formation (SF), finding systematic variations in both the apparent dense gas fraction and the apparent SF efficiency (SFE) of dense gas. The latter may be unexpected, given the popularity of gas density threshold models to explain SF scaling relations. We used the IRAM 30-m telescope to observe HCN(1-0) across 29 nearby disk galaxies whose CO(2-1) emission has previously been mapped by the HERACLES survey. Because our observations span a range of galactocentric radii, we are able to investigate the properties of the dense gas as a function of local conditions. We focus on how the IR/CO, HCN/CO, and IR/HCN ratios (observational cognates of the…
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