Abstract

Star complexes are the largest globular regions of star formation in galaxies. If there is a spiral density wave, nuclear ring, tidal ar m, or other welldefined stellar structure, then gravitational instabiliti es in the gaseous component produce giant cloud complexes with a spacing of about three times the width. These gas complexes form star complexes, giving the familiar beads on a string of star formation along spiral arms, or nuclear hotspots in t he case of a ring. Turbulence compression, supernovae, and self-gravitational contraction inside the giant clouds produce a nearly scale-free structure, inc luding giant molecular clouds that form OB associations and molecular cloud cores that form clusters. Without stellar density waves or similar structures, rando m gravitational instabilities form flocculent spirals and these fragment into sta r complexes, OB associations and star clusters in the same way. In this case, all o f the structure originates with gravitational instabilities and turbulence co mpression, but the usual concept of a star complex applies only to the largest globular object in the hierarchy, which has a size defined by the flocculent arm width or ga laxy thickness. The largest coherent star-forming regions are the flocculen t arms themselves. At the core of the hierarchy are the very dense clumps in which individual and binary stars form. The overall star formation rate in a galaxy appears to be regulated by gravitational collapse on large scales, giving th e Kennicutt/Schmidt law scaling with density, but the efficiency factor in front o f this scaling law depends on the fraction of the gas that is in a dense form. Turbulence compression probably contributes to this fraction, producing a univers al efficiency on galactic scales and the observed star formation rate in disk syste ms. The CO version of the Schmidt law, recently derived by Heyer et al. (2004), follows from the turbulent hierarchy as well, as do the local efficiencies of s tar formation in OB associations and clusters. The efficiency of star formation increases with cloud density, and this is why most stars form in clusters that are i nitially self-bound. To be published in “The many scales in the Universe - JENAM 2004 Astrophysics Reviews,” from the Joint European and National Astronomical Meeting in Granada, Spain, September 13-17, 2004. Kluwer Academic Publishers, edited by Jose Carlos del Toro Iniesta, et al.

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