A Search for correlations between turbulence and star formation in LITTLE THINGS dwarf irregular galaxies
Deidre A. Hunter, Bruce G. Elmegreen, Haylee Archer, Caroline E., Simpson, and Phil Cigan

TL;DR
This study investigates the relationship between turbulence and star formation in dwarf irregular galaxies, finding weak correlations and suggesting limited turbulence driven by star formation, with implications for molecular gas content.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed analysis of turbulence and star formation correlations in LITTLE THINGS dwarf irregular galaxies, highlighting the weak link between turbulence and star formation.
Findings
Weak correlation between star formation rate and gas turbulence.
Supernova energy accounts for only ~0.5% of local HI turbulence.
HI consumption time is ~1.6 Gyr, similar to CO dark molecular gas timescale.
Abstract
Turbulence has the potential for creating gas density enhancements that initiate cloud and star formation (SF), and it can be generated locally by SF. To study the connection between turbulence and SF, we looked for relationships between SF traced by FUV images, and gas turbulence traced by kinetic energy density (KED) and velocity dispersion () in the LITTLE THINGS sample of nearby dIrr galaxies. We performed 2D cross-correlations between FUV and KED images, measured cross-correlations in annuli to produce correlation coefficients as a function of radius, and determined the cumulative distribution function of the cross correlation value. We also plotted on a pixel-by-pixel basis the locally excess KED, , and HI mass surface density, , as determined from the respective values with the radial profiles subtracted, versus the excess SF rate density…
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