The SFR-radius connection: data and implications for wind strength and halo concentration
Lin Lin, S. M. Faber, David C. Koo, Samir Salim, Aaron A. Dutton,, Jerome J. Fang, Fangzhou Jiang, Cristoph T. Lee, Aldo Rodr\'iguez-Puebla, A., van der Wel, Yicheng Guo, Guillermo Barro, Joel R. Primack, Avishai Dekel,, Zhu Chen, Yifei Luo, Viraj Pandya, Rachel S. Somerville

TL;DR
This study examines the relationship between galaxy radius and star formation rate, finding little correlation and suggesting that halo properties influence galaxy wind strength and size, with implications for galaxy evolution models.
Contribution
It introduces a model linking galaxy size and star formation to halo concentration, explaining observed trends and wind strength variations.
Findings
Little trend between SFR and galaxy radius at fixed stellar mass.
Smaller galaxies at fixed mass have weaker galactic winds.
Galaxy properties are mainly set by halo mass and concentration.
Abstract
This paper is one in a series that explores the importance of radius as a second parameter in galaxy evolution. The topic investigated here is the relationship between star formation rate (SFR) and galaxy radius () for main-sequence star-forming galaxies. The key observational result is that, over a wide range of stellar mass and redshift in both CANDELS and SDSS, there is little trend between SFR and at fixed stellar mass. The Kennicutt-Schmidt law, or any similar density-related star formation law, then implies that smaller galaxies must have lower gas fractions than larger galaxies (at fixed ), and this is supported by observations of local star-forming galaxies. We investigate the implication by adopting the equilibrium "bathtub" model: the ISM gas mass is assumed to be constant over time and the net star formation rate is the difference between the…
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