A global correlation linking young stars, clouds, and galaxies. Towards a unified view of star formation
I. Mendigut\'ia, C.J. Lada, R.D. Oudmaijer

TL;DR
This paper uncovers a universal linear correlation spanning 16 orders of magnitude linking star formation rates, dense gas, and accretion processes across galaxies, clouds, and stars, suggesting a fundamental underlying relation.
Contribution
It proposes a unified bottom-up hypothesis connecting protostellar accretion to galaxy-scale star formation, supported by extensive observational data across scales.
Findings
A statistically significant correlation spanning 16 orders of magnitude.
The SFR can be estimated from protostellar accretion rates within clouds.
The correlation supports a common underlying physical process across cosmic scales.
Abstract
(abridged) The star formation rate (SFR) linearly correlates with the amount of dense gas mass (Mdg) involved in the formation of stars both for distant galaxies and clouds in our Galaxy. Similarly, the mass accretion rate (Macc) and the disk mass (Mdisk) of young, Class II stars are also linearly correlated. We plotted the corresponding observational data together, finding a statistically significant correlation that spans ~ 16 orders of magnitude. This probably represents one of the widest ranges of any empirical correlation known, encompassing galaxies that are several kpc in size, pc-size star-forming clouds within our Galaxy, down to young, pre-main sequence stars with au-size protoplanetary disks. We propose a bottom-up hypothesis suggesting that a relation between Macc and the total circumstellar mass surrounding Class 0/I sources (Mcs; disk+envelope) drives the correlation in…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena
