Molecular gas and star formation within 12 strong galactic bars observed with IRAM-30m
Sim\'on D\'iaz-Garc\'ia, Ute Lisenfeld, Isabel P\'erez, Almudena, Zurita, Simon Verley, Fran\c{c}oise Combes, Daniel Espada, St\'ephane Leon,, Vicent Mart\'inez-Badenes, Jos\'e Sabater, Lourdes Verdes-Montenegro

TL;DR
This study investigates molecular gas and star formation efficiency in 12 strongly barred galaxies, revealing that SFE varies but is generally consistent with spiral galaxies, and is influenced by galaxy mass and interaction history.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed multi-wavelength analysis of molecular gas and star formation along bars in a diverse sample of strongly barred galaxies.
Findings
Molecular gas detected along all bars studied.
Star formation efficiency varies up to an order of magnitude among galaxies.
Higher galaxy mass correlates with lower SFE in bars.
Abstract
While some galactic bars show recent massive star formation (SF) along them, some others present a lack of it. Whether bars with low level of SF are a consequence of low star formation efficiency (SFE), low gas inflow rate, or dynamical effects, remains a matter of debate. We perform a multi-wavelength analysis of 12 strongly barred massive galaxies, chosen to host different degrees of SF along the bar major axis without any prior condition on gas content. We observe the CO(1-0) and CO(2-1) emission within bars with the IRAM-30m telescope, which we use to estimate molecular gas masses. SF rates (SFR) are calculated from GALEX near- and far- ultraviolet (UV) and WISE 12 and 22 micron images within the beam pointings, covering the full bar extent. We detect molecular gas along the bars of all probed galaxies. The SFE in bars varies between galaxies by up to an order of magnitude. On…
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