The Spitzer View of Low-Metallicity Star Formation: II. Mrk 996, a Blue Compact Dwarf Galaxy with an Extremely Dense Nucleus
T. X. Thuan (1), L. K. Hunt (2), Y. I. Izotov (3) ((1) University of, Virginia, Charlottesville, USA, (2) Istituto di Radioastronomia, Firenze,, Italy, (3) Main Astronomical Observatory, Kyiv, Ukraine)

TL;DR
This study uses multi-wavelength observations to analyze the dense nuclear star-forming region of Mrk 996, revealing complex ionization sources, distinct HII regions, and unusual infrared properties in a low-metallicity dwarf galaxy.
Contribution
It provides a detailed characterization of Mrk 996's dense nucleus, identifying two distinct HII regions and proposing shock-induced ionization as the primary source of hard radiation.
Findings
Presence of two distinct HII regions with different densities
Detection of strong PAH emission despite low metallicity
Hard ionizing radiation likely from radiative shocks
Abstract
(abridged) We present new Spitzer, UKIRT and MMT observations of the blue compact dwarf galaxy (BCD) Mrk 996, with an oxygen abundance of 12+log(O/H)=8.0. This galaxy has the peculiarity of possessing an extraordinarily dense nuclear star-forming region, with a central density of ~10^6 cm^{-3}. The nuclear region of Mrk 996 is characterized by several unusual properties: a very red color J-K = 1.8, broad and narrow emission-line components, and ionizing radiation as hard as 54.9 eV, as implied by the presence of the OIV 25.89 micron line. The nucleus is located within an exponential disk with colors consistent with a single stellar population of age >1 Gyr. The infrared morphology of Mrk 996 changes with wavelength. The IRS spectrum shows strong narrow Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbon (PAH) emission, with narrow line widths and equivalent widths that are high for the metallicity of Mrk…
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