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23 April 2024
 
  » arxiv » astro-ph/0103213

 Article overview


An Ultraviolet through Infrared Look at Star Formation and Super Star Clusters in Two Circumnuclear Starburst Rings
Dan Maoz ; Aaron J. Barth ; Luis C. Ho ; Amiel Sternberg ; Alexei V. Filippenko ;
Date 14 Mar 2001
Subject astro-ph
AffiliationTel-Aviv U., Columbia U.), Aaron J. Barth (CfA), Luis C. Ho (OCIW), Amiel Sternberg (Tel-Aviv U.), Alexei V. Filippenko (Berkeley
AbstractWe present broad-band (U, V, I,and H) and narrow-band(H-alpha+[N II] and Paschen-alpha) images of the circumnuclear starburst rings in two nearby spiral galaxies, NGC 1512 and NGC 5248, obtained with WFPC2 and NICMOS on HST. Combined with HST images at 2300 Ang, these data provide a particularly wide wavelength range with which to study the properties of the stellar populations, the gas, and the dust in the rings. Some large (50-pc scale) line emitting regions have little associated continuum emission, but a Pa equivalent width indicating a few-Myr-old embedded stellar population. The Ha/Pa intensity ratios suggest the gas is mixed with dust, making it effective at obscuring some of the young clusters. We identify about 1000 compact continuum sources (super star clusters and individual stars) and analyze their spectral energy distributions (SEDs) from 0.2 to 1.6 micron by fitting them with a grid of spectral synthesis models with a range of ages and extinctions. Most of the visible clusters are only mildly reddened, with A_V=0 to 1 mag, suggesting that the processes that clear out the gas and dust of the stellar birth clouds are efficient and fast. The patchiness of the dust distribution makes it difficult to estimate reliably the star formation rate, based on UV continuum slope or hydrogen emission-line ratios. The cluster SEDs are consistent with a range in ages, from 1 Myr to 300 Myr, but with only a minority older than a few tens of Myr. However, after accounting for an age bias, the fraction of old clusters is consistent with continuous star formation in the rings over the past ~300 Myr. Some of the brightest young clusters have excess emission in the IR that may be radiation by circumstellar dust. The cluster mass functions follow an m^-2 power-law distribution, distinct from those of old globular clusters.
Source arXiv, astro-ph/0103213
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