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We present results from the EDGE survey, a spatially resolved CO(1-0) follow-up to CALIFA, an optical Integral Field Unit (IFU) survey of local galaxies. By combining the data products of EDGE and CALIFA, we study the variation in molecular gas depletion time ($tau_{rm dep}$) on kiloparsec scales in 52 galaxies. We divide each galaxy into two parts: the center, defined as the region within $0.1 R_{25}$, and the disk, defined as the region between $0.1$ and $0.7 R_{25}$. We find that 14 galaxies show a shorter $tau_{rm dep}$ ($sim 1$ Gyr) in the center relative to that in the disk ($tau_{rm dep} sim 2.4$ Gyrs), which means the central region in those galaxies is more efficient at forming stars per unit molecular gas mass. This finding implies that the centers with shorter $tau_{rm dep}$ resemble the intermediate regime between galactic disks and starburst galaxies. Furthermore, the central drop in $tau_{rm dep}$ is correlated with a central increase in the stellar surface density, suggesting that a shorter $tau_{rm dep}$ is associated with molecular gas compression by the stellar gravitational potential. We argue that varying the CO-to-H$_2$ conversion factor only exaggerates the central drop of $tau_{rm dep}$.
Feedback from an active galactic nucleus (AGN) is often implicated as a mechanism that leads to the quenching of galactic star formation. However, AGN-driven quenching is challenging to reconcile with observations that AGN hosts tend to harbour equal
We present a comparative study of molecular and ionized gas kinematics in nearby galaxies. These results are based on observations from the EDGE survey, which measured spatially resolved $^{12}$CO(J=1-0) in 126 nearby galaxies. Every galaxy in EDGE h
We investigate the prevalence, properties, and kinematics of extraplanar diffuse ionized gas (eDIG) in a sample of 25 edge-on galaxies selected from the CALIFA survey. We measure ionized gas scale heights from ${rm Halpha}$ and find that 90% have mea
Understanding how galaxies cease to form stars represents an outstanding challenge for galaxy evolution theories. This process of star formation quenching has been related to various causes, including Active Galactic Nuclei (AGN) activity, the influe
We present an empirical relation between the cold gas surface density ($Sigma_{rm gas}$) and the optical extinction (${rm A_V}$) in a sample of 103 galaxies from the Extragalactic Database for Galaxy Evolution (EDGE) survey. This survey provides CARM