On the universality of star formation efficiency in galaxies
Ava Polzin, Andrey V. Kravtsov, Vadim A. Semenov, Nickolay Y. Gnedin

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution simulations to show that star formation efficiency per free-fall time remains roughly constant across different environments, mainly due to turbulence and feedback processes.
Contribution
It demonstrates that turbulence-driven and feedback-regulated star formation explains the observed universality of efficiency in galaxies.
Findings
Star formation efficiency per free-fall time ranges from 0.01 to 0.1.
Efficiency shows no significant dependence on metallicity.
Turbulence and feedback regulate star-forming regions, maintaining efficiency universality.
Abstract
We analyze high-resolution hydrodynamics simulations of an isolated disk dwarf galaxy with an explicit model for unresolved turbulence and turbulence-based star formation prescription. We examine the characteristic values of the star formation efficiency per free-fall time, , and its variations with local environment properties, such as metallicity, UV flux, and surface density. We show that the star formation efficiency per free-fall time in pc star-forming regions of the simulated disks has values in the range , similar to observational estimates, with no trend with metallicity and only a weak trend with the UV flux. Likewise, estimated using projected patches of 500 pc size does not vary with metallicity and shows only a weak trend with average UV flux and gas surface density. The…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
