Water emission tracing active star formation from the Milky Way to high-$z$ galaxies
K. M. Dutkowska, L. E. Kristensen

TL;DR
This paper develops a galactic model to trace active star formation across the universe using water emission from molecular outflows, linking local star formation processes to distant galaxies.
Contribution
It introduces a large-scale statistical model based on local cluster observations to predict molecular water emission as a tracer of star formation in galaxies.
Findings
Water emission from para-H2O 202 - 111 line is a low-contrast star formation tracer.
IMF and cloud mass distribution have negligible impact on water emission predictions.
Star formation efficiency and free-fall time significantly influence emission results.
Abstract
(Abridged) The question of how most stars in the Universe form remains open. While star formation predominantly occurs in young massive clusters, the current framework focuses on isolated star formation. One way to access the bulk of protostellar activity within star-forming clusters is to trace signposts of active star formation with emission from molecular outflows. These outflows are bright in water emission, providing a direct observational link between nearby and distant galaxies. We propose to utilize the knowledge of local star formation as seen with molecular tracers to explore the nature of star formation in the Universe. We present a large-scale statistical galactic model of emission from galactic active star-forming regions. Our model is built on observations of well-resolved nearby clusters. By simulating emission from molecular outflows, which is known to scale with mass,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Pharmacological Effects and Assays · Atmospheric Ozone and Climate
