Bibcode
DOI
Deeg, Hans-Jorg
Referencia bibliográfica
Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific, v.106, p.916
Fecha de publicación:
8
1994
Número de citas
1
Número de citas referidas
1
Descripción
A sample of actively star forming H II galaxies has been observed in the
radio continuum and several optical bands. These galaxies are currently
undergoing very active star formation and have been selected on the
basis of strong radio continuum emission. Most of the galaxies are
irregular and have been associated with merger or interaction events,
which may have triggered the star formation and the radio emission.
Radio continuum observations at 0.32 GHz, 1.5 GHz, and in the range of
8-15 GHz were obtained at the NRAO-VLA, to determine their radio
spectra. Several of the spectra were found to flatten towards lower
frequencies, which is unusual. Surface and aperture photometry was
obtained in the B,R, and I bands and in the H-alpha emission line. Radio
emission, absorption, and relativistic electron loss mechanisms are
reviewed and their suitability to account for the observed spectral
shapes is discussed. Energy equipartition calculations led to galaxy
magnetic fields of 10-30 mu-G; the radiation density inside the H II
regions has been derived by a new method and was found to be in the
range of 2 to 15 eVJcm^-3. Mechanisms which may account for the observed
radio spectra were fitted to the radio continuum data. The spectra
resulting from a time variable relativistic electron injection
('synchrotron aging') have been calculated over a greater range of
parameters than previously published. Fits of these spectra show
variations of the injection rate with time scales of the order of a few
Myrs. A fit based on free-free absorption uses the emission measure to
balance both free-free absorption and thermal emission, thereby
constraining the maximum size of the thermally emitting region. This
permits a direct comparison with the optical H-alpha observations which
typically show H II regions with sizes between 0.5 and 1 kpc. The fits
allowed the derivation of a variety of physical parameters, such as the
electron density, which is typically between 10 and 60 cm-3, and the
emission measure, which is of the order of a few 10^5 pc cm^-6. Fits of
different mechanisms may describe the same spectrum well, thus, in some
cases, a unique determination of a particular mechanism is not possible,
although an estimate for its likelihood can be made. Parts of this work
have been published by Deeg et al. (1993, ApJ 410, 626). The fraction of
thermal emission in the galaxies has been determined with a higher
reliability than usual by combining radio, H-alpha, and UV data. A
correlation between the fraction of thermal emission and the size, as
well as the total luminosity of the galaxies has been found. A simple
model of relativistic electron diffusion losses--dependent on a
galaxies' size--can reproduce the observed correlation well; its
suitability and limits are discussed. This correlation may lead to a
better understanding between the supernova rate in a galaxy and the
expected non-thermal emission, a relation which is currently only very
poorly known. Star formation rates based on thermal and nonthermal radio
and FIR emission all indicate star formation which is enhanced during
the last 10^6-7 years as compared to the long term (1 Gyr) rates based
on B band photometry. `Synchrotron aging', optical colors and the
thermal to FIR ratio were used to derive typical ages of star formation.
Based on the star formation rates and the age indicators, the galaxies
were sorted into an sequence of their starbursts ages. The physical
picture of a region in which star formation, subsequent SN explosions,
and the resulting nonthermal radio emission takes place, can be
accounted for well, by comparing the different star formation estimators
which are based on a variety of radiative processes and across three
regions of the electromagnetic spectrum. (SECTION: Dissertation
Summaries)