The most extreme starbursts occur in galaxy mergers, and it is now
acknowledged that dynamical triggering has a primary importance in star
formation. This triggering is due partly to the enhanced velocity dispersion
provided by gravitational instabilities, such as density waves and bars, but
mainly to the radial gas flows they drive, allowing large amounts of gas to
condense towards nuclear regions in a small time scale. Numerical simulations
with several gas phases, taking into account the feedback to regulate star
formation, have explored the various processes, using recipes like the Schmidt
law, moderated by the gas instability criterion. May be the most fundamental
parameter in starbursts is the availability of gas: this sheds light on the
amount of external gas accretion in galaxy evolution. The detailed mechanisms
governing gas infall in the inner parts of galaxy disks are discussed.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, to be published in "Starbursts - From 30 Doradus
to Lyman break galaxies", ed. R. de Grijs and R. Gonzalez-Delgad