Stellar structures, molecular gas, and star formation across the PHANGS sample of nearby galaxies
M. Querejeta, E. Schinnerer, S. Meidt, J. Sun, A. K. Leroy, E. Emsellem, R. S. Klessen, J. C. Munoz-Mateos, H. Salo, E. Laurikainen, I. Beslic, G. A. Blanc, M. Chevance, D. A. Dale, C. Eibensteiner, C. Faesi, A. Garcia-Rodriguez, S. C. O. Glover, K. Grasha, J. Henshaw

TL;DR
This study maps stellar structures in 74 nearby galaxies, analyzing how different environments influence molecular gas and star formation, revealing complex interactions rather than simple correlations with galaxy features.
Contribution
It provides a detailed morphological analysis of stellar structures and their relationship with gas and star formation, challenging previous assumptions about the role of bars and spiral arms.
Findings
Molecular gas and star formation are evenly distributed among environments.
Bars show diverse gas and star formation properties, not always gas-depleted.
Spiral arms do not significantly boost star formation efficiency.
Abstract
We identify stellar structures in the PHANGS sample of 74 nearby galaxies and construct morphological masks of sub-galactic environments based on Spitzer 3.6 micron images. At the simplest level, we distinguish centres, bars, spiral arms, interarm and discs without strong spirals. Slightly more sophisticated masks include rings and lenses, publicly released but not explicitly used in this paper. We examine trends using PHANGS-ALMA CO(2-1) intensity maps and tracers of star formation. The interarm regions and discs without strong spirals dominate in area, whereas molecular gas and star formation are quite evenly distributed among the five basic environments. We reproduce the molecular Kennicutt-Schmidt relation with a slope compatible with unity within the uncertainties, without significant slope differences among environments. In contrast to early studies, we find that bars are not…
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