Bibcode
Knapen, J. H.; Beckman, J. E.; Cepa, J.; Nakai, N.
Bibliographical reference
Astronomy and Astrophysics, v.308, p.27-39
Advertised on:
4
1996
Journal
Citations
54
Refereed citations
53
Description
We present new J=1->0 ^12^CO observations along the northern spiral
arm of the grand-design spiral galaxy M 100 (NGC 4321), and study the
distribution of molecular hydrogen as derived from these observations,
comparing the new data with a set of data points on the southern arm
published previously. We compare these measurements on both spiral arms
and on the interarm regions with observations of the atomic and ionized
hydrogen components. We determine massive star formation efficiency
parameters, defined as the ratio of Hα luminosity to total gas
mass, along the arms and compare the values to those in the interarm
regions adjacent to the arms. We find that these parameters in the
spiral arms are on average a factor of 3 higher than outside the arms, a
clear indication of triggering of the star formation in the spiral arms.
We discuss possible mechanisms for this triggering, and conclude that a
density wave system is probably responsible for it. We discuss several
possible systematical effects in some detail, and infer that the
conclusions on triggering are sound. We specifically discuss the
possible effects of extinction in Hα, or a non-standard CO to H_2_
conversion factor (X), and find that our conclusions on the enhancement
of the efficiencies in the arms are reinforced rather than weakened by
these considerations. A simple star forming scheme involving threshold
densities for gravitational collapse is discussed for NGC 4321, and
comparison is made with M 51. We find that the gas between the arms is
generally stable against gravitational collapse whereas the gas in the
arms is not, possibly leading to the observed arm-interarm differences
in efficiency, but also note that these results, unlike the others
obtained in this paper, do depend critically on the assumed value for
the conversion factor.