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Resolved Star Formation Efficiency in the Antennae Galaxies

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 Added by Allison Matthews
 Publication date 2018
  fields Physics
and research's language is English




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We use Atacama Large Millimeter Array CO(3-2) observations in conjunction with optical observations from the Hubble Space Telescope to determine the ratio of stellar to gas mass for regions in the Antennae Galaxies. We adopt the term instantaneous mass ratio IMR(t) = M$_{stars}$/(M$_{gas}$ +M$_{stars}$), that is equivalent to the star formation efficiency for an idealized system at t = 0. We use two complementary approaches to determining the IMR(t) based on 1) the enclosed stellar and molecular mass within circular apertures centered on optically-identified clusters, and 2) a tessellation algorithm that defines regions based on CO emission. We find that only a small number of clusters appear to have IMR(0) = SFE > 0.2, which suggests that only a small fraction of these clusters will remain bound. The results suggest that by ages of $10^{6.7}$ years, some clusters will have lost all of their associated molecular gas, and by $10^{7.5}$ years this is true for the majority of clusters. There appears to be slight dependence of the IMR(t) on the CO surface brightness, which could support the idea that dense molecular environments are more likely to form bound clusters. However, the IMR(t) appears to have a strong dependence on extinction, which likely traces the evolutionary state of clusters.



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We study the relationship between dense gas and star formation in the Antennae galaxies by comparing ALMA observations of dense gas tracers (HCN, HCO$^+$, and HNC $mathrm{J}=1-0$) to the total infrared luminosity ($mathrm{L_{TIR}}$) calculated using data from the textit{Herschel} Space Observatory and the textit{Spitzer} Space Telescope. We compare the luminosities of our SFR and gas tracers using aperture photometry and employing two methods for defining apertures. We taper the ALMA dataset to match the resolution of our $mathrm{L_{TIR}}$ maps and present new detections of dense gas emission from complexes in the overlap and western arm regions. Using OVRO CO $mathrm{J}=1-0$ data, we compare with the total molecular gas content, $mathrm{M(H_2)_{tot}}$, and calculate star formation efficiencies and dense gas mass fractions for these different regions. We derive HCN, HCO$^+$ and HNC upper limits for apertures where emission was not significantly detected, as we expect emission from dense gas should be present in most star-forming regions. The Antennae extends the linear $mathrm{L_{TIR}-L_{HCN}}$ relationship found in previous studies. The $mathrm{L_{TIR}-L_{HCN}}$ ratio varies by up to a factor of $sim$10 across different regions of the Antennae implying variations in the star formation efficiency of dense gas, with the nuclei, NGC 4038 and NGC 4039, showing the lowest SFE$_mathrm{dense}$ (0.44 and 0.70 $times10^{-8}$ yr$^{-1}$). The nuclei also exhibit the highest dense gas fractions ($sim 9.1%$ and $sim7.9%$).
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121 - Yu Gao 2000
(abridged) We report here a factor of 5.7 higher total CO flux in Arp~244 (the ``Antennae galaxies) than that previously accepted in the literature (thus a total molecular gas mass of 1.5x10$^{10}$ Msun), based on our fully sampled CO(1-0) observations at the NRAO 12m telescope. Our observations show that the molecular gas peaks predominately in the disk-disk overlap region between the nuclei, similar to the far-infrared (FIR) and mid-infrared (MIR) emission. The bulk of the molecular gas is forming into stars with a normal star formation efficiency (SFE) L_{IR}/M(H_2) approx 4.2 Lsun/Msun, same as that of giant molecular clouds in the Galactic disk. Additional supportive evidence is the extremely low fraction of the dense molecular gas in Arp~244, revealed by our detections of the HCN(1-0) emission. We estimate the local SFE indicated by the ratio map of the radio continuum to CO(1-0) emission. Remarkably, the local SFE stays roughly same over the bulk of the molecular gas distribution. Only some localized regions show the highest radio-to-CO ratios that we have identified as the sites of the most intense starbursts with SFE >~ 20 Lsun/Msun. These starburst regions are confined exclusively in the dusty patches seen in the HST images near the CO and FIR peaks where presumably the violent starbursts are heavily obscured. Nevertheless, recent large-scale star formation is going on throughout the system, yet the measured level is more suggestive of a moderate starburst (SFE >~ 10 Lsun/Msun) or a weak to normal star formation (SFE ~ 4 Lsun/Msun). The overall starburst from the bulk of the molecular gas is yet to be initiated as most of the gas further condenses into kpc scale in the final coalescence.
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