2010MNRAS.405.2791G


Query : 2010MNRAS.405.2791G

2010MNRAS.405.2791G - Mon. Not. R. Astron. Soc., 405, 2791-2809 (2010/July-2)

On the nature of star formation at large galactic radii.

GODDARD Q.E., KENNICUTT R.C. and RYAN-WEBER E.V.

Abstract (from CDS):

We have compared far-ultraviolet (FUV), near-ultraviolet (NUV) and Hα measurements for star-forming regions in 21 galaxies, in order to characterize the properties of their discs at radii beyond the main optical radius (R25).

In our representative sample of extended and non-extended ultraviolet (UV) discs, we find that half of the extended UV discs also exhibit extended Hα emission. We find that extended UV discs fall into two categories: those with a sharp truncation in the Hα disc close to the optical edge (R25), and those with extended emission in Hα as well as in the UV. Although most galaxies with strong Hα truncations near R25 show a significant corresponding falloff in UV emission (a factor of 10-100), the transition tends to be much smoother than in Hα, and significant UV emission often extends well beyond this radius, confirming earlier results by Thilker et al. and others.

After correcting for dust attenuation the median fraction of total FUV emission from regions outside of R25 is 1.7 per cent, but it can be as high as 35 per cent in the most extreme cases. The corresponding fractions of Hα emission are approximately half as large on average. This difference reflects both a slightly lower ratio of Hα to UV emission in the HII regions in the outer discs and a lower fraction of star clusters showing HII regions. Most HII regions in the extended disc have fluxes consistent with small numbers of ionizing O-type stars, and this poor sampling of the upper initial mass function (IMF) in small clusters can probably account for the differences in the emission properties, consistent with earlier conclusions by Zaritsky & Christlein, without needing to invoke a significant change in the stellar IMF itself. Consistent Hα/FUV ratios and brightest HII region to total Hα fluxes in the inner and extended discs across our whole galaxy sample demonstrate no evidence for a change in the cluster luminosity function or the IMF in the low gas density outer disc.


Abstract Copyright: © 2010 The Authors. Journal compilation © 2010 RAS

Journal keyword(s): galaxies: haloes - galaxies: star formation - galaxies: photometry - galaxies: star clusters: general - galaxies: structure - galaxies: stellar content

Simbad objects: 29

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Number of rows : 29
N Identifier Otype ICRS (J2000)
RA
ICRS (J2000)
DEC
Mag U Mag B Mag V Mag R Mag I Sp type #ref
1850 - 2024
#notes
1 NGC 300 GiG 00 54 53.4465638304 -37 41 03.168402396 8.83 8.69 8.13 7.46   ~ 1499 2
2 M 74 G 01 36 41.7451236624 +15 47 01.107512304 10.52 10.00 9.46 9.16   ~ 1731 1
3 NGC 925 H2G 02 27 16.913 +33 34 43.97   10.69 10.12 9.55   ~ 781 1
4 NGC 1097 LIN 02 46 19.059 -30 16 29.68 10.46 9.97 9.48 8.72 9.8 ~ 1340 3
5 NGC 1269 EmG 03 17 18.5785534752 -41 06 28.628735184 9.85 9.83 8.81 8.72   ~ 422 1
6 NGC 1512 GiP 04 03 54.281 -43 20 55.86 11.30 11.43 10.54 10.37   ~ 395 1
7 NGC 1533 EmG 04 09 51.8356041744 -56 07 06.410207352   11.77 10.92 10.27 11.0 ~ 198 0
8 NGC 1566 Sy1 04 20 00.3968473248 -54 56 16.624708764 10.29 10.19 9.73 9.21 10.1 ~ 910 2
9 NGC 2841 LIN 09 22 02.6778711696 +50 58 35.737082868 10.43 10.09 9.22     ~ 1073 1
10 NGC 3198 EmG 10 19 54.990 +45 32 58.88 10.83 10.87 10.33     ~ 905 1
11 M 95 GiP 10 43 57.7313485800 +11 42 13.301191332 10.71 10.51 9.73 9.48   ~ 1120 2
12 NGC 3521 G 11 05 48.5680991376 -00 02 09.245076540 10.06 9.83 9.02 10.1 9.6 ~ 817 2
13 NGC 3621 Sy2 11 18 16.300 -32 48 45.36 10.10 9.44 9.56 8.07 10.1 ~ 590 3
14 ACO 1367 ClG 11 44 44.6 +19 41 59           ~ 1075 1
15 M 100 AGN 12 22 54.9299993592 +15 49 20.296257960 10.04 10.05 9.35     ~ 1844 2
16 NAME Virgo Cluster ClG 12 26 32.1 +12 43 24           ~ 6633 0
17 NGC 4536 GiP 12 34 27.1 +02 11 18 11.14 11.16 10.55 17.393   ~ 852 3
18 M 58 Sy2 12 37 43.5 +11 49 06 10.80 10.48 9.66     ~ 1077 2
19 NGC 4618 GiP 12 41 32.8976471760 +41 09 03.185175528 11.03 11.22 10.78     ~ 329 2
20 NGC 4625 GiP 12 41 52.7121819576 +41 16 26.115765780 12.74 12.92 12.35     ~ 364 2
21 NGC 4625A G 12 42 11.1 +41 15 10   18.6       ~ 8 1
22 HZ 34 WD* 12 55 14.6823782377 +37 32 29.666871272   15.510 15.690 16.070   DAO.6 70 1
23 M 51 Sy2 13 29 52.698 +47 11 42.93   9.26 8.36 8.40   ~ 4327 4
24 M 83 SBG 13 37 00.91920 -29 51 56.7400 8.85 8.11 7.52 7.21   ~ 2571 2
25 NGC 5398 LSB 14 01 21.555 -33 03 49.62   12.87 12.39 11.99 12.6 ~ 132 1
26 M 101 GiP 14 03 12.583 +54 20 55.50   8.46 7.86 7.76   ~ 2910 2
27 NGC 5474 GiP 14 05 01.608 +53 39 43.95   11.28 10.79     ~ 443 1
28 NGC 7552 Sy1 23 16 10.66 -42 35 04.7 11.34 11.22 10.57 10.08 11.1 ~ 552 3
29 NGC 7793 GiG 23 57 49.7540045856 -32 35 27.701550744 10.26 9.74 9.28 9.06 9.7 ~ 1105 2

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