The Impact of Shear on Disk Galaxy Star Formation Rates
Xena L. Fortune-Bashee, Jiayi Sun, Jonathan C. Tan

TL;DR
This study investigates how galactic shear influences star formation efficiency in disk galaxies, providing observational evidence supporting shear-driven GMC collision models and exploring environmental effects like galactic bars.
Contribution
It offers the first large-sample observational test of shear's impact on star formation efficiency, confirming predictions of shear-driven GMC collision models.
Findings
SFE per orbital time declines with decreasing shear as predicted.
Results align with shear-driven GMC collision theory.
Galactic bars modestly reduce star formation efficiency.
Abstract
Determining the physical processes that control galactic-scale star formation rates is essential for an improved understanding of galaxy evolution. The role of orbital shear is currently unclear, with some models expecting reduced star formation rates (SFRs) and efficiencies (SFEs) with increasing shear, e.g., if shear stabilizes gas against gravitational collapse, while others predicting enhanced rates, e.g., if shear-driven collisions between giant molecular clouds (GMCs) trigger star formation. Expanding on the analysis of 16 galaxies by Suwannajak, Tan, \& Leroy (2014), we assess the shear dependence of SFE per orbital time () in 49 galaxies selected from the PHANGS-ALMA survey. In particular, we test a prediction of the shear-driven GMC collision model that , where…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
