Testing the star formation scaling relations in the clumps of the North American and Pelican cloud complexes
Abstract
The processes which regulate the star-formation within molecular clouds are still not well understood. Various star-formation scaling relations have been proposed to explain this issue by formulating a relation between star-formation rate surface density ( SFR) and the underlying gas surface density ( gas). In this work, we test various star formation scaling relations, such as Kennicutt-Schmidt relation, volumetric star-formation relation, orbital time model, crossing time model, and multi free-fall time scale model towards the North American and Pelican Nebulae complexes and in cold clumps associated with them. Measuring stellar-mass from young stellar objects and gaseous mass from CO measurements, we estimated mean SFR, star formation rate per free-fall time, and star formation efficiency (SFE) for clumps to be 1.5 M~yr-1~kpc-2, 0.009, 2.0\%, respectively, while for the entire NAN complex the values are 0.6 M~yr-1~kpc-2, 0.0003, and 1.6\%, respectively. For clumps, we notice that the observed properties are in line with the correlation obtained between SFR and gas, and between SFR and gas per free-fall time and orbital time for Galactic clouds. At the same time, we do not observe any correlation with gas per crossing time and multi free-fall time. Even though we see correlations in former cases, however, all models agree with each other within a factor of 0.5 dex, and discriminating between these models is not possible due to the current uncertainties in the input observables. We also test the variation of SFR versus the dense gas, but due to low statistics, a weak correlation is seen in our analysis.
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