Understanding the Star Formation Efficiency in Dense Gas: Initial Results from the CAFFEINE Survey with ArT\'eMiS
M. Mattern, Ph. Andr\'e, A. Zavagno, D. Russeil, H. Roussel, N., Peretto, F. Schuller, Y. Shimajiri, J. Di Francesco, D. Arzoumanian, V., Rev\'eret, and C. De Breuck

TL;DR
This study investigates star formation efficiency in dense gas within galactic clouds, using high-resolution observations to test whether SFE depends on density or remains constant, providing insights into the physics of filament fragmentation.
Contribution
The paper presents high-resolution column density maps from the CAFFEINE survey, enabling a detailed analysis of SFE dependence on density in dense molecular clouds.
Findings
SFE does not increase with density above a critical threshold.
SFE in dense gas is approximately constant across different densities.
Results support filament fragmentation physics as the main regulator of SFE.
Abstract
Despite recent progress, the question of what regulates the star formation efficiency in galaxies remains one of the most debated problems in astrophysics. According to the dominant picture, star formation (SF) is regulated by turbulence and feedback, and the SFE is 1-2% per local free-fall time. In an alternate scenario, the SF rate in galactic disks is linearly proportional to the mass of dense gas above a critical density threshold. We aim to discriminate between these two pictures thanks to high-resolution observations tracing dense gas and young stellar objects (YSOs) for a comprehensive sample of 49 nearby massive SF complexes out to d < 3 kpc in the Galactic disk. We use data from CAFFEINE, a 350/450 m survey with APEX/ArT\'eMiS of the densest portions of all southern molecular clouds, in combination with Herschel data to produce column density maps at 8" resolution. Our…
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