Observational Evidence of Dynamic Star Formation Rate in Milky Way Giant Molecular Clouds
Eve J. Lee, Marc-Antoine Miville-Deschenes, and Norman Murray

TL;DR
This study analyzes a large sample of giant molecular clouds in the Milky Way to investigate the variability of star formation rates on small scales, revealing that star formation is a dynamic process rather than steady.
Contribution
It provides observational evidence that star formation rates in GMCs are highly variable and dynamic, challenging the notion of a uniform star formation efficiency.
Findings
Star formation efficiency varies over 3-4 orders of magnitude.
Most clouds have star formation efficiencies near the median with significant scatter.
Variable star formation efficiency models explain the observed dispersion.
Abstract
Star formation on galactic scales is known to be a slow process, but whether it is slow on smaller scales is uncertain. We cross-correlate 5469 giant molecular clouds (GMCs) from a new all-sky catalog with 256 star forming complexes (SFCs) to build a sample of 191 SFC-GMC complexes---collections of multiple clouds each matched to 191 SFCs. The total mass in stars harbored by these clouds is inferred from WMAP free-free fluxes. We measure the GMC mass, the virial parameter, the star formation efficiency and the star formation rate per free-fall time . Both and range over 3--4 orders of magnitude. We find that 68.3% of the clouds fall within and about the median. Compared to these observed scatters, a simple model with a time…
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