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We explore the pitfalls which affect the comparison of the star-formation (SF) relation for nearby molecular clouds with that for distant compact molecular clumps. We show that both relations behave differently in the ($Sigma_{gas}$, $Sigma_{SFR}$) space, where $Sigma_{gas}$ and $Sigma_{SFR}$ are, respectively, the gas and SF rate surface densities, even when the physics of star formation is the same. This is because the SF relation of nearby clouds relates gas and star surface densities measured locally, that is, within a given interval of gas surface density, or at a given protostar location. We refer to such measurements as local measurements, and the corresponding SF relation as the local relation. In contrast, the stellar content of a distant molecular clump remains unresolved. Only the mean SF rate can be obtained from e.g. the clump infrared luminosity. One clump therefore provides one single point to the ($Sigma_{gas}$, $Sigma_{SFR}$) space, that is, its mean gas surface density and SF rate surface density. We refer to this SF relation as a global relation since it builds on the global properties of molecular clumps. Its definition therefore requires an ensemble of cluster-forming clumps. We show that, although the local and global relations have different slopes, this per se cannot be taken as evidence for a change in the physics of SF with gas surface density. It therefore appears that great caution should be taken when physically interpreting a composite SF relation, that is, a relation combining together local and global measurements.
Resolution studies of test problems set baselines and help define minimum resolution requirements, however, resolution studies must also be performed on scientific simulations to determine the effect of resolution on the specific scientific results.
Recent observations have revealed massive galactic molecular outflows that may have physical conditions (high gas densities) required to form stars. Indeed, several recent models predict that such massive galactic outflows may ignite star formation w
This note is concerned with potentially misleading concepts in the treatment of cosmological magnetic fields by magnetohydrodynamical (MHD) modelling. It is not a criticism of MHD itself but rather a cautionary comment on the validity of its use in c
X-ray luminosity ($L_X$) originating from high-mass X-ray binaries (HMXBs) is tightly correlated with the host galaxys star-formation rate (SFR). We explore this connection at sub-galactic scales spanning ${sim}$7 dex in SFR and ${sim}$8 dex in speci
The attenuation of light in star forming galaxies is correlated with a multitude of physical parameters including star formation rate, metallicity and total dust content. This variation in attenuation is even more prevalent on the kiloparsec scale, w