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Paper: The Star Formation Efficiency within Galaxies
Volume: 230, Galaxy Disks and Disk Galaxies
Page: 391
Authors: Young, J. S.; Rownd, B. K.
Abstract: We combine our Hα imaging (Young et al. 1996) with the CO-line observations of the FCRAO Extragalactic CO Survey (Young et al. 1995) to study the relationship between molecular gas and high-mass star formation for 568 regions in 121 galaxies at 45'' resolution. Our study finds a strong correlation between these quantities when sampled locally within galaxies, consistent with recent studies of globally averaged quantities. For individual spiral galaxies, there are no strong radial gradients in the star formation efficiency across the star forming disk, although star formation efficiencies measured in the outermost regions (R >= 9 kpc) of mid-sized galaxies tend to be systematically low. Additionally, star formation efficiencies in galaxies with optical diameters in excess of 60 kpc are uniformly low at all radii compared with smaller galaxies. As a function of morphology and environment, the behavior of the star formation efficiency within galaxies is consistent with the results of our previous investigation of the global quantities. Among spirals, the star formation efficiency does not depend on Hubble type -- we find a similar range of efficiencies within each type and less than 25% variation in the mean from type to type. Relative to an isolated galaxy sample, the star formation efficiency is found to be sensitive only to extreme variations in the galaxy environment. The star formation efficiency decreases steadily with increasing HI-deficiency among Virgo cluster spirals, and is enhanced in strong interactions and mergers.
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