The THESAN-ZOOM project: Star formation efficiency from giant molecular clouds to galactic scale in high-redshift starbursts
Zihao Wang, Xuejian Shen, Mark Vogelsberger, Hui Li, Rahul Kannan, Ewald Puchwein, Aaron Smith, Josh Borrow, Enrico Garaldi, Laura Keating, Oliver Zier, William McClymont, Sandro Tacchella, Yang Ni, Lars Hernquist

TL;DR
This study uses cosmological simulations to explore how star formation efficiency connects from giant molecular clouds to entire galaxies at high redshifts, revealing universal cloud properties and environmental influences on star formation.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the scaling of galaxy-wide star formation efficiency with halo mass and redshift, and characterizes GMC properties in high-redshift starbursts.
Findings
Galaxy-scale SFE scales with halo mass and redshift as expected from feedback models.
GMC properties such as mass function and surface density are remarkably universal.
High SFE phases can occur in feedback shock fronts and due to dark matter confinement at high redshift.
Abstract
Star formation in galaxies is inherently complex, involving the interplay of physical processes over a hierarchy of spatial scales. In this work, we investigate the connection between global (galaxy-scale) and local (cloud-scale) star formation efficiencies (SFEs) at high redshifts (), using the state-of-the-art cosmological zoom-in simulation suite THESAN-ZOOM. We find that the galaxy-scale average SFE, , scales with , consistent with expectations from feedback-regulated models. On cloud scales, we identify giant molecular clouds (GMCs) in a broad sample of high-redshift starbursts spanning a wide range of halo masses and redshifts. Star formation in these systems is predominantly hosted by filamentary GMCs embedded in a dense and highly turbulent interstellar medium (ISM). GMCs…
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