Linking dense gas from the milky way to external galaxies
Author
dc.contributor.author
Stephens, Ian W.
Author
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Jackson, James M.
Author
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Whitaker, J. Scott
Author
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Contreras, Yanett
Author
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Guzmán, Andres E.
Author
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Sanhueza, Patricio
Author
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Foster, Jonathan B.
Author
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Rathborne, Jill
Admission date
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2016-12-06T20:10:17Z
Available date
dc.date.available
2016-12-06T20:10:17Z
Publication date
dc.date.issued
2016-06-10
Cita de ítem
dc.identifier.citation
The Astrophysical Journal Volumen: 824 Número: 1 (2016)
es_ES
Identifier
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10.3847/0004-637X/824/1/29
Identifier
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https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/141712
Abstract
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In a survey of 65 galaxies, Gao & Solomon found a tight linear relation between the infrared luminosity (L-IR, a proxy for the star formation rate) and the HCN(1-0) luminosity (L-HCN). Wu et al. found that this relation extends from these galaxies to the much less luminous Galactic molecular high-mass star-forming clumps (similar to 1 pc scales), and posited that there exists a characteristic ratio L-IR/L-HCN for high-mass star-forming clumps. The Gao-Solomon relation for galaxies could then be explained as a summation of large numbers of high-mass star-forming clumps, resulting in the same LIR/LHCN ratio for galaxies. We test this explanation and other possible origins of the Gao-Solomon relation using high-density tracers (including HCN(1-0), N2H+(1-0), HCO+(1-0), HNC(1-0), HC3N (10-9), and C2H(1-0)) for similar to 300 Galactic clumps from the Millimetre Astronomy Legacy Team 90 GHz (MALT90) survey. The MALT90 data show that the Gao-Solomon relation in galaxies cannot be satisfactorily explained by the blending of large numbers of high-mass clumps in the telescope beam. Not only do the clumps have a large scatter in the L-IR/L-HCN ratio, but also far too many high-mass clumps are required to account for the Galactic IR and HCN luminosities. We suggest that the scatter in the L-IR/L-HCN ratio converges to the scatter of the Gao-Solomon relation at some size-scale greater than or similar to 1 kpc. We suggest that the Gao-Solomon relation could instead result from of a universal large-scale star formation efficiency, initial mass function, core mass function, and clump mass function.