The lifecycle of molecular clouds in nearby star-forming disc galaxies
M\'elanie Chevance, J. M. Diederik Kruijssen, Alexander P. S. Hygate,, Andreas Schruba, Steven N. Longmore, Brent Groves, Jonathan D. Henshaw,, Cinthya N. Herrera, Annie Hughes, Sarah M. R. Jeffreson, Philipp Lang, Adam, K. Leroy, Sharon E. Meidt, J\'er\^ome Pety

TL;DR
This study uses a new statistical method to analyze the lifecycle of giant molecular clouds in nearby star-forming galaxies, revealing short, environmentally-dependent lifetimes and the impact of stellar feedback on cloud dispersal.
Contribution
It introduces a novel approach to measure GMC evolutionary timelines across multiple galaxies, highlighting environmental effects on cloud lifetimes and star formation processes.
Findings
GMC lifetimes are typically 10-30 Myr with environmental variation.
GMCs disperse rapidly (1-5 Myr) after star formation begins due to stellar feedback.
Star formation efficiencies in GMCs are 4-10%.
Abstract
It remains a major challenge to derive a theory of cloud-scale ( pc) star formation and feedback, describing how galaxies convert gas into stars as a function of the galactic environment. Progress has been hampered by a lack of robust empirical constraints on the giant molecular cloud (GMC) lifecycle. We address this problem by systematically applying a new statistical method for measuring the evolutionary timeline of the GMC lifecycle, star formation, and feedback to a sample of nine nearby disc galaxies, observed as part of the PHANGS-ALMA survey. We measure the spatially-resolved ( pc) CO-to-H flux ratio and find a universal de-correlation between molecular gas and young stars on GMC scales, allowing us to quantify the underlying evolutionary timeline. GMC lifetimes are short, typically 10-30 Myr, and exhibit environmental variation, between and within…
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