论文标题
垂直分辨的边缘星系中的体积恒星形成处方
Volumetric Star Formation Prescriptions in Vertically Resolved Edge-on Galaxies
论文作者
论文摘要
我们使用CO(CARMA/OVRO)和/或HI(EVLA)观察值测量了边缘Galaxy NGC 4013和较小边缘星系(NGC 4157和5907)的气盘厚度。我们还使用Spitzer IR数据(3.6 $ $ $ m和24 $ $ m)估算了五个星系样本的恒星和/或恒星形成率(SFR)的比例高度。我们使用测得的比例高度以及径向表面密度曲线得出气体和SFR的平均体积密度。使用与表面密度更为物理上相关的体积密度,我们研究了体积恒星形成法(SFL)的存在,体积SFL与表面密度SFL的不同以及如何根据我们的星系样品来调节SFR。我们发现,在总气体方面,体积和表面SFL具有明显不同的斜率,而在分子气体上的体积和表面SFL则没有显示出任何明显的差异。与斜率(2.05)和表面SFL的散射(2.05)相比,总气体的体积SFL的较平坦的幂律斜率为1.26,散布较小为0.19 DEX。分子气体SFL的斜率为0.78(体积密度)和0.77(表面密度),具有相同的RMS散射。我们表明,星际气压与SFR密切相关,但基于体积和表面密度之间的相关性之间没有显着差异。
We measure the gas disc thicknesses of the edge-on galaxy NGC 4013 and the less edge-on galaxies (NGC 4157 and 5907) using CO (CARMA/OVRO) and/or HI (EVLA) observations. We also estimate the scale heights of stars and/or the star formation rate (SFR) for our sample of five galaxies using Spitzer IR data (3.6 $μ$m and 24 $μ$m). We derive the average volume densities of the gas and the SFR using the measured scale heights along with radial surface density profiles. Using the volume density that is more physically relevant to the SFR than the surface density, we investigate the existence of a volumetric star formation law (SFL), how the volumetric SFL is different from the surface-density SFL, and how the gas pressure regulates the SFR based on our galaxy sample. We find that the volumetric and surface SFLs in terms of the total gas have significantly different slopes, while the volumetric and surface SFLs in terms of the molecular gas do not show any noticeable difference. The volumetric SFL for the total gas has a flatter power-law slope of 1.26 with a smaller scatter of 0.19 dex compared to the slope (2.05) and the scatter (0.25 dex) of the surface SFL. The molecular gas SFLs have similar slopes of 0.78 (volume density) and 0.77 (surface density) with the same rms scatter. We show that the interstellar gas pressure is strongly correlated with the SFR but find no significant difference between the correlations based on the volume and surface densities.