Title of article :
Star formation rate in galaxies from UV, IR, and H (alpha) estimators
Author/Authors :
Hirashita، H. نويسنده , , Buat، V. نويسنده , , Inoue، A. K. نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2003
Abstract :
Infrared (IR) luminosity of galaxies originating from dust thermal emission can be used as an indicator of the star formation rate (SFR). Inoue et al. (2000, IHK) have derived a formula for the conversion from dust IR luminosity to SFR by using the following three quantities: the fraction of Lyman continuum luminosity absorbed by gas ( f), the fraction of UV luminosity absorbed by dust ( (epsilon) , and the fraction of dust heating from old (>~10^8 yr) stellar populations ((eta)). We develop a method to estimate those three quantities based on the idea that the various way of SFR estimates from ultraviolet (UV) luminosity (2000 A luminosity), H (alpha) luminosity, and dust IR luminosity should return the same SFR. After applying our method to samples of galaxies, the following results are obtained in our framework. First, our method is applied to a sample of star-forming galaxies, finding that f~0.6, (epsilon)~0.5, and (eta)~0.4as representative values. Next, we apply the method to a starburst sample, which shows larger extinction than the star-forming galaxy sample. With the aid of f, (epsilon) and (eta), we are able to estimate reliable SFRs from UV and/or IR luminosities. Moreover, the H extinction is corrected by using the Balmer decrement, is suitable for a statistical analysis of SFR, because the same correction factor for the Lyman continuum extinction (i.e. 1/f) is applicable to both normal and starburst galaxies over all the range of SFR. The metallicity dependence of f and , and IR comoving luminosity densities at z=0 give a consistent SFR per comoving volume ( ...). Useful formulae for SFR estimate are listed.
Keywords :
ISM , dust , galaxies , Evolution , Extinction , starburst , Infrared , Ultraviolet
Journal title :
Astronomy and Astrophysics
Journal title :
Astronomy and Astrophysics