Detection of the H92alpha recombination line from the starbursts in the Circinus galaxy and NGC 1808
A. L. Roy, W. M. Goss, K. R. Anantharamaiah

TL;DR
This study detected radio recombination lines from the starburst nuclei of the Circinus galaxy and NGC 1808, providing insights into their ionized gas properties and star formation rates using VLA and ATCA observations.
Contribution
First detection of RRLs in the starburst nuclei of Circinus and NGC 1808, expanding the sample of extragalactic RRL emitters and enabling detailed plasma condition analysis.
Findings
Circinus galaxy is the fourth-strongest extragalactic RRL emitter at this frequency.
Estimated star formation rates range from 0.2 to 6 solar masses per year.
Detected RRL emission in NGC 1808 at 3.9 sigma significance.
Abstract
Context. Gas ionized by starburst activity radiates radio recombination lines (RRLs), from which one can derive the plasma conditions and the number of massive stars formed in the burst, free of dust obscuration effects. Aims. We aimed to find RRL emission from additional starburst systems and to use the line properties to estimate the properties of the ionized gas. Methods. We conducted a search for RRLs in the nearby extragalactic starburst or Seyfert galaxies NGC 1808, the Circinus galaxy, NGC 4038/9, II Zw 40, NGC 6221, NGC 7552, IRAS 18325-5926, IC 5063, and VV 114. We used the VLA and the ATCA to search for the RRLs H91alpha and H92alpha with rest frequencies of 8.6 GHz and 8.3 GHz. Results. We detected for the first time RRLs from the starburst nuclei in the Circinus galaxy and NGC 1808. The Circinus galaxy was detected with a line strength integrated over the source of 3.2…
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