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We construct a series of model galaxies in rotational equilibrium consisting of gas, stars, and a fixed dark matter (DM) halo and study how these equilibrium systems depend on the mass and form of the DM halo, gas temperature, non-thermal and rotation support against gravity, and also on the redshift of galaxy formation. For every model galaxy we find the minimum gas mass M_g^min required to achieve a state in which star formation (SF) is allowed according to contemporary SF criteria. The obtained M_g^min--M_DM relations are compared against the baryon-to-DM mass relation M_b--M_DM inferred from the LambdaCDM theory and WMAP4 data. Our aim is to construct realistic initial models of dwarf galaxies (DGs), which take into account the gas self-gravity and can be used as a basis to study the dynamical and chemical evolution of DGs. Rotating equilibria are found by solving numerically the steady-state momentum equation for the gas component in the combined gravitational potential of gas, stars, and DM halo using a forward substitution procedure. We find that for a given M_DM the value of M_g^min depends crucially on the gas temperature T_g, gas spin parameter alpha, degree of non-thermal support sigma_eff, and somewhat on the redshift for galaxy formation z_gf. Depending on the actual values of T_g, alpha, sigma_eff, and z_gf, model galaxies may have M_g^min that are either greater or smaller than M_b. Galaxies with M_DM ga 10^9 M_sun are usually characterized by M_g^min la M_b, implying that SF in such objects is a natural outcome as the required gas mass is consistent with what is available according to the LambdaCDM theory. On the other hand, models with M_DM la 10^9 M_sun are often characterized by M_g^min >> M_b, implying that they need much more gas than available to achieve a state in which SF is allowed. Abridged.
We present a model of star formation in self-gravitating turbulent gas. We treat the turbulent velocity $v_T$ as a dynamical variable, and assume that it is adiabatically heated by the collapse. The theory predicts the run of density, infall velocity
(abridged) We study the consequence of star formation (SF) in an self-gravity dominated accretion disk in quasars. The warm skins of the SF disk are governed by the radiation from the inner part of the accretion disk to form Compton atmosphere (CAS).
We describe cosmological galaxy formation simulations with the adaptive mesh refinement code Enzo that incorporate a star formation prescription regulated by the local abundance of molecular hydrogen. We show that this H2-regulated prescription leads
[abridged] We study the resolved stellar populations and derive the SFH of the SDIG, a gas-rich dwarf galaxy member of the NGC7793 subgroup in the Sculptor group. We construct a CMD using archival HST observations and examine its stellar content. We
Feedback from massive stars is believed to play a critical role in shaping the galaxy mass function, the structure of the interstellar medium (ISM), and the low efficiency of star formation, but the exact form of the feedback is uncertain. In this pa