Size-Luminosity Scaling Relations of Local and Distant Star Forming Regions
Abstract
We investigate star forming scaling relations using Bayesian inference on a comprehensive data sample of low- (z<0.1) and high-redshift (1<z<5) star forming regions. This full data set spans a wide range of host galaxy stellar mass (M* 106-1011 M) and clump star formation rates (SFR 10-5-102 M yr-1). We fit the power-law relationship between the size (rHα) and luminosity (LHα) of the star forming clumps using the Bayesian statistical modeling tool Stan that makes use of Markov Chain Monte Carlo (MCMC) sampling techniques. Trends in the scaling relationship are explored for the full sample and subsets based on redshift and selection effects between samples. In our investigation we find no evidence of redshift evolution of the size-luminosity scaling relationship, nor a difference in slope between lensed and unlensed data. There is evidence of a break in the scaling relationship between high and low star formation rate surface density (SFR) clumps. The size-luminosity power law fit results are LHα rHα2.8 and LHα rHα1.7 for low and high SFR clumps, respectively. We present a model where star forming clumps form at locations of gravitational instability and produce an ionized region represented by the Str\"omgren radius. A radius smaller than the scale height of the disk results in a scaling relationship of L r3 (high SFR clumps), and a scaling of L r2 (low SFR clumps) if the radius is larger than the disk scale height.
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