Star formation inefficiency and Kennicutt-Schmidt laws in early-type galaxies
Brian Jiang, Luca Ciotti, Zhaoming Gan, and Jeremiah Ostriker

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution simulations to show that early-type galaxies can follow Kennicutt-Schmidt star formation laws similar to disk galaxies, suggesting star formation inefficiency is partly due to outflows and local conditions.
Contribution
The paper demonstrates that early-type galaxies can form stellar disks following cooling episodes and follow Kennicutt-Schmidt laws, challenging the view of these galaxies as completely quiescent.
Findings
Simulated ETGs reproduce observed star formation thresholds and slopes.
Star formation inefficiency may be mitigated by high gaseous outflows.
Resolved star formation laws align with observations in disk galaxies.
Abstract
Star formation in disk galaxies is observed to follow the empirical Kennicutt-Schmidt law, a power-law relationship between the surface density of gas () [] and the star formation rate () []. In contrast to disk galaxies, early-type galaxies (ETGs) are typically associated with little to no star formation and therefore no Kennicutt-Schmidt law; recent observations, however, have noted the presence of massive gaseous cold disks in ETGs, raising the question as to why the conversion of gas into stars is so inefficient. With our latest simulations, performed with our high-resolution hydrodynamic numerical code MACER, we reevaluate the traditional classification of ETGs as quiescent, dead galaxies. We predict the inevitable formation of stellar disks following…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Refrigeration and Air Conditioning Technologies
