Bibcode
Schaye, Joop; Dalla Vecchia, C.
Bibliographical reference
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, Volume 383, Issue 3, pp. 1210-1222.
Advertised on:
1
2008
Citations
594
Refereed citations
560
Description
When averaged over large scales, star formation in galaxies is observed
to follow the empirical Kennicutt-Schmidt (KS) law for surface densities
above a constant threshold. While the observed law involves surface
densities, theoretical models and simulations generally work with volume
density laws (i.e. Schmidt laws). We derive analytic relations between
star formation laws expressed in terms of surface densities, volume
densities, and pressures and we show how these relations depend on
parameters such as the effective equation of state of the multiphase
interstellar medium. Our analytic relations enable us to implement
observed surface density laws into simulations. Because the parameters
of our prescription for star formation are observables, we are not free
to tune them to match the observations. We test our theoretical
framework using high-resolution simulations of isolated disc galaxies
that assume an effective equation of state for the multiphase
interstellar medium. We are able to reproduce the star formation
threshold and both the slope and the normalization of arbitrary input KS
laws without tuning any parameters and with very little scatter, even
for unstable galaxies and even if we use poor numerical resolution.
Moreover, we can do so for arbitrary effective equations of state. Our
prescription therefore enables simulations of galaxies to bypass our
current inability to simulate the formation of stars. On the other hand,
the fact that we can reproduce arbitrary input thresholds and KS laws,
rather than just the particular ones picked out by nature, indicates
that simulations that lack the physics and/or resolution to simulate the
multiphase interstellar medium can only provide limited insight into the
origin of the observed star formation laws.