Resolved Kennicutt-Schmidt law in two strongly lensed star-forming galaxies at redshift 1
Abstract
We study the star formation rate (SFR) versus molecular gas mass (Mmol) scaling relation from hundreds to thousands parsec scales in two strongly lensed galaxies at redshift z 1, the Cosmic Snake and A521. We trace SFR using extinction-corrected rest-frame UV observations with the Hubble Space Telescope (HST), and Mmol using detections of the CO(4--3) line with the Atacama Large Millimetre/submillimetre Array (ALMA). The similar angular resolutions of our HST and ALMA observations of 0.15-0.2\,'' combined with magnifications reaching μ>20 enable us to resolve structures in the galaxies of sizes lower than 100\,pc. These resolutions are close to those of nearby galaxies studies. This allows us to investigate for the first time the Kennicutt-Schmidt (KS) law (SFR-Mmol surface densities) at different spatial scales, from galactic scales to 100\,pc scales, in galaxies at z 1. At integrated scales we find that both galaxies satisfy the KS law defined by galaxies at redshifts between 1 and 2.5. We test the resolved KS (rKS) law in cells of sizes down to 200\,pc in the two galaxies. We observe that this relationship generally holds in these z 1 galaxies although its scatter increases significantly with decreasing spatial scales. We check the scale dependence of the spatial correlation between the surface densities of SFR and Mmol by focussing on apertures centred on individual star-forming regions and molecular clouds. We conclude that star-forming regions and molecular clouds become spatially de-correlated at 1\,kpc in the Cosmic Snake, whereas they appear de-correlated at all spatial scales (from 400\,pc to 6\,kpc) in A521.
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