Star formation drivers across the M33 disk
Edvige Corbelli, Bruce Elmegreen, Sara Ellison, Simone Bianchi

TL;DR
This study analyzes star formation across M33's disk, revealing that gas pressure is the primary driver of star formation rates and that the pressure-SFR relation varies between the inner and outer disk regions.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis of the physical drivers of star formation in M33, highlighting the role of gas pressure and the variation of scaling laws across the disk.
Findings
Gas pressure is the main driver of star formation rate surface density.
Molecular hydrogen correlates tightly with pressure across the disk.
The pressure-SFR relation changes slope from inner to outer disk.
Abstract
We investigate the star formation process across the disk of M33 using a multiwavelength dataset and disk dynamics. We computed numerically equilibrium values of gas densities and scale heights across the disk, taking into account dark matter and testing several analytic approximations that are often used to estimate these variables and the hydrostatic pressure. Orthogonal regressions and hierarchical Bayesian models, as well as random forest (RF) analyses, were used to establish the fundamental relations at physical scales from 160~pc to 1~kpc. The gas pressure, is the main driver of the star formation rate (SFR) surface density throughout the whole star-forming disk of M33. High-pressure regions enhance the atomic-to-molecular gas conversion, with the molecular hydrogen mass surface density being tightly correlated to pressure and a uniform scaling law throughout the M33 disk. The…
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