Populating H2 and CO in galaxy simulation with dust evolution

2018 
There are two major theoretical issues for the star formation law (the relation between the surface densities of molecular gas and star formation rate on a galaxy scale): (i) At low metallicity, it is not obvious that star-forming regions are rich in H$_2$ because the H$_2$ formation rate depends on the dust abundance; and (ii) whether or not CO really traces H$_2$ is uncertain, especially at low metallicity. To clarify these issues, we use a hydrodynamic simulation of an isolated disc galaxy with a spatial resolution of a few tens parsecs. The evolution of dust abundance and grain size distribution is treated consistently with the metal enrichment and the physical state of the interstellar medium. We compute the H$_2$ and CO abundances using a subgrid post-processing model based on the dust abundance and the dissociating radiation field calculated in the simulation. We find that when the metallicity is $\lesssim 0.4$ Z$_\odot$ ($t<1$ Gyr), H$_2$ is not a good tracer of star formation rate because H$_2$-rich regions are limited to dense compact regions. At $Z\gtrsim 0.8$ Z$_\odot$, a tight star formation law is established for both H$_2$ and CO. At old ($t \sim 10$ Gyr) ages, we also find that adopting the so-called MRN grain size distribution with an appropriate dust-to-metal ratio over the entire disc gives reasonable estimates for the H$_2$ and CO abundances. For CO, improving the spatial resolution of the simulation is important while the H$_2$ abundance is not sensitive to sub-resolution structures at $Z\gtrsim 0.4$ Z$_\odot$.
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