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Using N-body/gasdynamic simulations of a Milky Way-like galaxy we analyse a Kennicutt-Schmidt relation, $Sigma_{SFR} propto Sigma_{gas}^N$, at different spatial scales. We simulate synthetic observations in CO lines and UV band. We adopt the star formation rate defined in two ways: based on free fall collapse of a molecular cloud - $Sigma_{SFR, cl}$, and calculated by using a UV flux calibration - $Sigma_{SFR, UV}$. We study a KS relation for spatially smoothed maps with effective spatial resolution from molecular cloud scales to several hundred parsecs. We find that for spatially and kinematically resolved molecular clouds the $Sigma_{SFR, cl} propto Sigma_{rm gas}^N$ relation follows the power-law with index $N approx 1.4$. Using UV flux as SFR calibrator we confirm a systematic offset between the $Sigma_{rm UV}$ and $Sigma_{rm gas}$ distributions on scales compared to molecular cloud sizes. Degrading resolution of our simulated maps for surface densities of gas and star formation rates we establish that there is no relation $Sigma_{rm SFR, UV} - Sigma_{rm gas}$ below the resolution $sim 50$ pc. We find a transition range around scales $sim 50-120$ pc, where the power-law index $N$ increases from 0 to 1-1.8 and saturates for scales larger $sim 120$ pc. A value of the index saturated depends on a surface gas density threshold and it becomes steeper for higher $Sigma_{gas}$ threshold. Averaging over scales with size of $>150$ pc the power-law index $N$ equals 1.3-1.4 for surface gas density threshold $sim 5 M_odot$pc$^{-2}$. At scales $>120$ pc surface SFR densities determined by using CO data and UV flux, $Sigma_{rm SFR, UV}/Sigma_{rm SFR, cl}$, demonstrate a discrepancy about a factor of 3. We argue that this may be originated from overestimating (constant) values of conversion factor, star formation efficiency or UV calibration used in our analysis.
The surface densities of molecular gas, $Sigma_{rm H_2}$, and the star formation rate (SFR), $dotSigma_star$, correlate almost linearly on kiloparsec scales in observed star-forming (non-starburst) galaxies. We explore the origin of the linear slope
We have mapped the northern area (30 times 20) of a local group spiral galaxy M33 in 12CO(J=1-0) line with the 45-m telescope at the Nobeyama Radio Observatory. Along with Halpha and Spitzer 24-micron data, we have investigated the relationship betwe
The Kennicutt-Schmidt (KS) relation between the gas mass and star formation rate (SFR) describes the star formation regulation in disk galaxies. It is a function of gas metallicity, but the low metallicity regime of the KS diagram is poorly sampled.
Results from the UV satellite GALEX revealed large extensions of disks in some nearby spiral galaxies, extending out to 3 to 4 times the isophotal radius, r25. M63 is a remarkable example of a spiral galaxy with one of the most extended UV disks, so
Massive galaxies in the distant Universe form stars at much higher rates than today. Although direct resolution of the star forming regions of these galaxies is still a challenge, recent molecular gas observations at the IRAM Plateau de Bure interfer