Extreme Variation in Star Formation Efficiency Across a Compact, Starbursting Disk Galaxy
Abstract
We report on the internal distribution of star formation efficiency in IRAS 08339+6517 (hereafter IRAS08), using 200~pc resolution CO(2-1) observations from NOEMA. The molecular gas depletion time changes by 2 orders-of-magnitude from disk-like values in the outer parts to less than 108~yr inside the half-light radius. This translates to a star formation efficiency per free-fall time that also changes by 2 orders-of-magnitude, reaching 50-100\%, different than local spiral galaxies and typical assumption of constant, low star formation efficiencies. Our target is a compact, massive disk galaxy that has SFR 10× above the z=0 main-sequence; Toomre Q≈0.5-0.7 and high gas velocity dispersion (σmol≈ 25~km~s-1). We find that IRAS08 is similar to other rotating, starburst galaxies from the literature in the resolved SFRmolN relation. By combining resolved literature studies we find that distance from the main-sequence is a strong indicator of the Kennicutt-Schmidt powerlaw slope, with slopes of N≈1.6 for starbursts from 100-104~M~pc-2. Our target is consistent with a scenario in which violent disk instabilities drive rapid inflows of gas. It has low values of Toomre-Q, and also at all radii the inflow timescale of the gas is less than the depletion time, which is consistent with the flat metallicity gradients in IRAS08. We consider these results in light of popular star formation theories, in general observations of IRAS08 find the most tension with theories in which star formation efficiency is a constant. Our results argue for the need of high spatial resolution CO observations are a larger number of similar targets.
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