The Star Formation Rate and Gas Surface Density Relation in the Milky Way: Implications for Extragalactic Studies

Abstract

We investigate the relation between star formation rate (SFR) and gas surface densities in Galactic star forming regions using a sample of YSOs and massive clumps. Our YSO sample consists of objects located in 20 molecular clouds from the Spitzer cores to disks and Gould's Belt surveys. We estimate the gas surface density (Sigmagas) from Av maps and YSO SFR surface densities (SigmaSFR) from the number of YSOs, assuming a mean mass and lifetime. We also divide the clouds into contour levels of Av, counting only the youngest Class I and Flat SED YSOs. For a sample of massive star forming clumps, we derive SFRs from the infrared luminosity and use HCN gas maps to estimate Sigmagas. We find that Galactic clouds lie above the extragalactic relations (e.g., Kennicutt-Schmidt Law) by factors up to 17. Cloud regions with high Sigmagas lie above extragalactic relations up to a factor of 54 and overlap with massive clumps. We use 12CO and 13CO gas maps of the Perseus and Ophiuchus clouds to estimate Sigmagas and compare to Sigmagas from Av maps. We find that 13CO, underestimates the Av-based mass by factors of 4-5. 12CO may underestimate the total gas mass at Sigmagas > 200 Msun pc-2 by > 30%;however, this does not explain the large discrepancy between Galactic and extragalactic relations. We find evidence for a threshold of star formation (Sigmath) at 129+-14 Msun pc-2. At Sigmagas > Sigmath, the Galactic relation is linear. A possible reason for the difference between Galactic and extragalactic relations is that all the CO-emitting gas, including Sigmagas below Sigmath, is measured in extragalactic studies. If the Kennicutt-Schmidt relation (SigmaSFR Sigmagas1.4) and a linear relation between dense gas and star formation is assumed, the fraction of dense star forming gas (fdense) increases as Sigmagas0.4. When Sigmagas reaches ~300Sigmath, fdense is 1. (Abridged)

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