论文标题
Atlasgal-恒星形成效率和银河恒星形成率
ATLASGAL -- Star forming efficiencies and the Galactic star formation rate
论文作者
论文摘要
Atlasgal的调查表征了约1000个嵌入式HII区域的性质,并发现团块质量与降压光度亮度之间存在经验关系,涵盖了3-4个数量级。将这种关系与从初始质量函数绘制的模拟簇进行比较,并使用不同的星形形成效率,我们发现单个值无法将观察到的光度符合到质量($ L/m $)关系。我们已经使用蒙特卡洛模拟使用$ l/m $ -ratio来生成200,000个集群,以研究恒星形成效率如何随着团块质量的函数而变化。这表明,恒星的形成效率随着团块质量的增加而降低,值为0.2,质量为几百个太阳能质量,而质量为几千个太阳能质量的团块降至0.08。我们发现我们的结果与恒星形成效率之间的良好一致性是根据附近分子云中嵌入式对象计数确定的。使用星形形成效率关系和嵌入式星形成$ 2 \ pm1 $的红外时间,我们估计银河星形成速率约为$ 0.9 \ pm0.45 $ pm0.45 $ msun yr $^{ - 1} $,这与先前报道的值很好。该模型的优点是提供确定恒星形成速率的直接方法,并避免将红外发光性转化为影响先前银河系和外乳术研究的恒星质量时遇到的困难。
The ATLASGAL survey has characterised the properties of approximately 1000 embedded HII regions and found an empirical relationship between the clump mass and bolometric luminosity that covers 3-4 orders of magnitude. Comparing this relation with simulated clusters drawn from an initial mass function and using different star formation efficiencies we find that a single value is unable to fit the observed luminosity to mass ($L/M$) relation. We have used a Monte Carlo simulation to generate 200,000 clusters using the $L/M$-ratio as a constraint to investigate how the star formation efficiency changes as a function of clump mass. This has revealed that the star formation efficiency decreases with increasing clump mass with a value of 0.2 for clumps with masses of a few hundred solar masses and dropping to 0.08 for clumps with masses of a few thousand solar masses. We find good agreement between our results and star formation efficiencies determined from counts of embedded objects in nearby molecular clouds. Using the star formation efficiency relationship and the infrared excess time for embedded star formation of $2\pm1$, Myr we estimate the Galactic star formation rate to be approximately $0.9\pm0.45$ Msun yr$^{-1}$, which is in good agreement with previously reported values. This model has the advantage of providing a direct means of determining the star formation rate and avoids the difficulties encountered in converting infrared luminosities to stellar mass that affect previous galactic and extragalactic studies.