2011AJ....141..125A


Query : 2011AJ....141..125A

2011AJ....141..125A - Astron. J., 141, 125 (2011/April-0)

Very large array and ATCA search for natal star clusters in nearby star-forming galaxies.

AVERSA A.G., JOHNSON K.E., BROGAN C.L., GOSS W.M. and PISANO D.J.

Abstract (from CDS):

In order to investigate the relationship between the local environment and the properties of natal star clusters, we obtained radio observations of 25 star-forming galaxies within 20 Mpc using the Very Large Array and the Australia Telescope Compact Array. Natal star-forming regions can be identified by their characteristic thermal radio emission, which is manifest in their spectral index at centimeter wavelengths. The host galaxies in our sample were selected based upon their likelihood of harboring young star formation. In star-forming regions, the ionizing flux of massive embedded stars powers the dominant thermal free-free emission of those sources, resulting in a spectral index of α ≳ -0.2 (where Sν∝ να), which we compute. With the current sensitivity, we find that of the 25 galaxies in this sample only 5 have radio sources with spectral indices that are only consistent with a thermal origin, 4 have radio sources that are only consistent with a non-thermal origin, 6 have radio sources whose nature is ambiguous due to uncertainties in the spectral index, and 16 have no detected radio sources. For those sources that appear to be dominated by thermal emission, we infer the ionizing flux of the star clusters and the number of equivalent O7.5 V stars that are required to produce the observed radio flux densities. The most radio-luminous clusters that we detect have an equivalent of ∼7 x103 O7.5 V stars, and the smallest only have an equivalent of ∼102 O7.5 V stars; thus these star-forming regions span the range of large OB associations to moderate "super star clusters." With the current detection limits, we also place upper limits on the masses of clusters that could have recently formed; for a number of galaxies we can conclusively rule out the presence of natal clusters significantly more massive than the Galactic star-forming region W49A (∼5x104 M). The dearth of current massive cluster formation in these galaxies suggests that either their current star formation intensities have fallen to near or below that of the Milky Way and/or the evolutionary state that gives rise to thermal radio emission is short-lived.

Abstract Copyright:

Journal keyword(s): galaxies: irregular - galaxies: starburst - galaxies: star clusters: general - H II regions - stars: formation

Nomenclature: Tables 3-4: [AJB2011] Arp NNNa, [AJB2011] Arp NNNw, [AJB2011] Mrk NNw, [AJB2011] NGC NNNN, [AJB2011] NGC NNNNw, [AJB2011] NGC NNNNa, [AJB2011] NGC NNNNaw, [AJB2011] NGC 1313snr, N=15+12.

Simbad objects: 74

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Number of rows : 74
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 1036 AG? 02 40 28.982 +19 17 49.48   13.5       ~ 117 0
2 NGC 1140 EmG 02 54 33.5271666624 -10 01 43.142143908 12.41 12.84 12.49 13.6 13.5 ~ 286 1
3 NGC 1156 rG 02 59 42.8528847264 +25 14 28.352017320 12.13 12.32 11.74     ~ 313 1
4 SN 1978K SN* 03 17 38.620 -66 33 03.40   13.0       SNII 205 1
5 [L2004] n1313-341 Cl* 03 18 05.43 -66 30 24.9   17.15 16.76     ~ 3 0
6 NGC 1313 AG? 03 18 16.046 -66 29 53.74   10.06 10.0 9.40 10.4 ~ 688 2
7 [AJB2011] NGC 1313cw Rad 03 18 37.73 -66 29 33.7           ~ 1 0
8 [AJB2011] NGC 1313ce Rad 03 18 38.05 -66 29 31.8           ~ 1 0
9 [AJB2011] NGC 1313aw Rad 03 18 45.15 -66 30 15.0           ~ 1 0
10 [AJB2011] NGC 1313ae Rad 03 18 46.04 -66 30 15.2           ~ 1 0
11 SBSG 0335-052 bCG 03 37 44.06 -05 02 40.2     16.65     ~ 471 1
12 NGC 1510 GiP 04 03 32.640 -43 24 00.58 14.23 13.63 13.24 13.09   ~ 188 1
13 [AJB2011] NGC 1510 Rad 04 03 32.80 -43 23 58.1           ~ 1 0
14 NGC 1512 GiP 04 03 54.281 -43 20 55.86 11.30 11.43 10.54 10.37   ~ 396 1
15 NGC 1507 H2G 04 04 27.21 -02 11 18.9   12.8 12.36 13.0 12.9 ~ 132 0
16 NGC 1522 EmG 04 06 07.900 -52 40 05.91 14.53 14.16 13.78 13.62 14.0 ~ 62 0
17 [AJB2011] NGC 1522 Rad 04 06 08.13 -52 40 03.4           ~ 1 0
18 NAME NGC 1566 Group GrG 04 20 00.6 -54 56 17           ~ 152 0
19 NGC 2101 AG? 05 46 24.17 -52 05 18.7   13.68   12.70 14.0 ~ 56 0
20 NGC 2146 SBG 06 18 37.710 +78 21 25.27 11.67 11.38 10.59     ~ 720 2
21 NGC 2537 AG? 08 13 14.643 +45 59 23.25 12.18 12.50 11.69 11.66   ~ 301 2
22 ESO 495-21 bCG 08 36 15.190 -26 24 33.66 12.04 11.93 11.45 11.09 12.3 ~ 570 3
23 NGC 3003 GiG 09 48 35.580 +33 25 17.83   12.3       ~ 202 0
24 ESO 435-20 EmG 09 59 21.226 -28 08 00.04   14.42 14.08 13.33   ~ 81 2
25 NGC 3125 EmG 10 06 33.318 -29 56 07.32 13.03 13.45 13.00 12.50 13.4 ~ 237 1
26 [SFN2002] NGC 3125 A Rad 10 06 33.33 -29 56 06.6           ~ 4 0
27 [AJB2011] NGC 3125w Rad 10 06 33.34 -29 56 06.8           ~ 1 0
28 [AJB2011] NGC 3125e Rad 10 06 33.98 -29 56 11.9           ~ 1 0
29 [SFN2002] NGC 3125 B Rad 10 06 33.99 -29 56 12.2           ~ 4 0
30 NGC 3239 AG? 10 25 04.867 +17 09 49.21   13.5       ~ 182 0
31 [AJB2011] Arp 233n Rad 10 32 31.80 +54 24 04.0           ~ 1 0
32 [SSS2001] Mrk 33 N X 10 32 31.8 +54 24 04           ~ 2 0
33 [SSS2001] Mrk 33 S X 10 32 31.9 +54 24 03           ~ 2 0
34 Mrk 33 AG? 10 32 31.956 +54 24 03.53 13.29 13.66 13.13 12.71 12.27 ~ 368 1
35 [AJB2011] Arp 233s Rad 10 32 31.97 +54 24 02.4           ~ 1 0
36 [AJB2011] Arp 217e Rad 10 38 44.83 +53 30 05.0           ~ 1 0
37 NGC 3310 AGN 10 38 45.85707 +53 30 11.8940   12.45 12.15     ~ 773 1
38 [AJB2011] Arp 217d Rad 10 38 45.87 +53 30 12.1           ~ 1 0
39 [AJB2011] Arp 217c Rad 10 38 46.53 +53 30 06.4           ~ 1 0
40 [AJB2011] Arp 217b Rad 10 38 46.69 +53 30 11.8           ~ 1 0
41 [AJB2011] Arp 217a Rad 10 38 46.93 +53 30 16.8           ~ 1 0
42 UGC 5832 GiP 10 42 48.4745560080 +13 27 35.415343152   13.8       ~ 63 0
43 [AJB2011] Mrk 35w Rad 10 45 21.96 +55 57 39.8           ~ 1 0
44 [AJB2011] Mrk 35e Rad 10 45 22.02 +55 57 40.1           ~ 1 0
45 NGC 3353 AGN 10 45 22.390 +55 57 37.36 12.90 13.25 12.79     ~ 359 1
46 NAME M96 Group GrG 10 48 +13.3           ~ 314 0
47 NGC 4228 SBG 12 15 39.174 +36 19 36.80 10.63 10.30 9.93 9.74   ~ 965 1
48 NGC 4449 EmG 12 28 11.118 +44 05 36.81 10.11 9.98 9.64 9.45   ~ 1125 1
49 [AJB2011] NGC 4490e Rad 12 30 29.50 +41 39 28.4           ~ 1 0
50 NGC 4485 GiP 12 30 31.113 +41 42 04.22 12.10 12.42 11.93 11.93   ~ 284 2
51 [AJB2011] NGC 4490bw Rad 12 30 34.44 +41 38 25.4           ~ 1 0
52 NGC 4490 GiP 12 30 34.5 +41 38 26 10.03 10.22 9.79     ~ 574 3
53 [AJB2011] NGC 4490be Rad 12 30 34.50 +41 38 26.2           ~ 1 0
54 [AJB2011] NGC 4490c Rad 12 30 34.53 +41 38 33.3           ~ 1 0
55 [AJB2011] NGC 4490d Rad 12 30 34.91 +41 39 02.5           ~ 1 0
56 [AJB2011] NGC 4490a Rad 12 30 37.73 +41 37 58.8           ~ 1 0
57 APG 277 IG 12 54 49.9 +02 38 57           ~ 59 1
58 NGC 4809 GiP 12 54 51.06 +02 39 14.7   14.20       ~ 74 2
59 NGC 4810 GiP 12 54 51.4796706960 +02 38 16.213538760   14.8       ~ 63 1
60 IC 3961 GiP 12 59 00.2 +34 50 39   14.1       ~ 37 0
61 Mrk 59 AGN 12 59 00.288 +34 50 42.45           ~ 317 2
62 NGC 4861 H2G 12 59 02.340 +34 51 33.98   12.90 12.32     ~ 383 2
63 NGC 5107 GiP 13 21 25.269 +38 32 10.96   13.7       ~ 89 0
64 NGC 5238 GiP 13 34 42.5146948080 +51 36 49.168365696   14.2       ~ 130 0
65 NGC 5253 AGN 13 39 55.990 -31 38 24.11 11.48 10.94 10.49 10.33 13.47 ~ 1365 4
66 [AJB2011] NGC 5408s Rad 14 03 18.35 -41 22 52.6           ~ 1 0
67 [AJB2011] NGC 5408n Rad 14 03 18.67 -41 22 50.0           ~ 1 0
68 [SFN2002] NGC 5408 D Rad 14 03 18.69 -41 22 49.8           ~ 3 0
69 NGC 5408 EmG 14 03 20.907 -41 22 39.75   12.59   11.96 12.2 ~ 350 3
70 Mrk 829 GiP 14 50 56.495 +35 34 18.27   14.5 14.83     ~ 209 0
71 UGC 9562 GiP 14 51 14.3956253136 +35 32 32.932212324   14.2       ~ 160 0
72 APG 32 IG 17 13 09.1 +59 19 43           ~ 30 1
73 W 49a BL? 19 10 15.7 +09 06 05           ~ 306 2
74 3C 461 BL? 23 23 24.000 +58 48 54.00     14.30     ~ 2791 1

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