We study how environment regulates the star formation cycle of 33 Virgo
Cluster satellite galaxies on 720 parsec scales. We present the first resolved
star-forming main sequence for cluster galaxies, dividing the sample based on
their global HI properties and comparing to a control sample of field galaxies.
HI-poor cluster galaxies have reduced star formation rate (SFR) surface
densities with respect to both HI-normal cluster and field galaxies (0.5 dex),
suggesting that mechanisms regulating the global HI content are responsible for
quenching local star formation. We demonstrate that the observed quenching in
HI-poor galaxies is caused by environmental processes such as ram pressure
stripping (RPS) simultaneously reducing molecular gas surface density and star
formation efficiency (SFE), compared to regions in HI-normal systems (by 0.38
and 0.22 dex, respectively). We observe systematically elevated SFRs that are
driven by increased molecular gas surface densities at fixed stellar mass
surface density in the outskirts of early-stage RPS galaxies, while SFE remains
unchanged with respect to the field sample. We quantify how RPS and starvation
affect the star formation cycle of inner and outer galaxy discs as they are
processed by the cluster. We show both are effective quenching mechanisms with
the key difference being that RPS acts upon the galaxy outskirts while
starvation regulates the star formation cycle throughout disc, including within
the truncation radius. For both processes, the quenching is caused by a
simultaneous reduction in molecular gas surface densities and SFE at fixed
stellar mass surface density.Comment: 17 pages, 1 table, 5 figures, accepted for publication in Ap