The Kennicutt-Schmidt law and the main sequence of galaxies in Newtonian and Milgromian dynamics
Akram Hasani Zonoozi, Patrick Lieberz, Indranil Banik, Hosein Haghi,, Pavel Kroupa

TL;DR
This paper derives the Kennicutt-Schmidt law within both Newtonian and Milgromian dynamics, showing that star formation rates depend on gas density with a similar power-law index but different efficiencies, extending the law's applicability.
Contribution
It provides the first analytical derivation of the Kennicutt-Schmidt law in Milgromian dynamics, comparing it to Newtonian gravity and exploring implications for galaxy star formation.
Findings
The power-law index n=1.4 is consistent in both dynamics.
Milgromian dynamics predicts up to 25% higher star formation rates in dwarf galaxy centers.
Star formation extends further out in galaxies under Milgromian gravity.
Abstract
The Kennicutt-Schmidt law is an empirical relation between the star formation rate surface density () and the gas surface density () in disc galaxies. The relation has a power-law form . Assuming that star formation results from gravitational collapse of the interstellar medium, can be determined by dividing by the local free-fall time . The formulation of yields the relation between and , assuming that a constant fraction () of gas is converted into stars every . This is done here for the first time using Milgromian dynamics (MOND). Using linear stability analysis of a uniformly rotating thin disc, it is possible to determine the size of a collapsing perturbation within it. This lets us evaluate the sizes and masses of…
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