Star Formation Rates for Starburst Galaxies from Ultraviolet, Infrared, and Radio Luminosities
Lusine A. Sargsyan, Daniel W. Weedman

TL;DR
This study compares star formation rates derived from ultraviolet, infrared, and radio observations in starburst galaxies, revealing significant dust extinction effects on UV-based SFR estimates and confirming the reliability of infrared and radio indicators.
Contribution
It provides a detailed comparison of SFR indicators across multiple wavelengths, quantifies dust extinction effects, and confirms the consistency of infrared and radio SFR measurements in starburst galaxies.
Findings
SFR(PAH) agrees with SFR(radio) within uncertainties.
UV-based SFRs are underestimated by a factor of ~10 due to dust extinction.
Extinction correction factors increase with infrared luminosity, reaching >700 at high redshift.
Abstract
Star formation rates (SFR) are compared as determined from mid-infrared 7.7 um PAH luminosity [SFR(PAH)], from 1.4 GHz radio luminosity [SFR(radio)], and from far ultraviolet luminosity [SFR(UV)] for a sample of 287 starburst galaxies with z < 0.5 having Spitzer IRS observations. The previously adopted relation log [SFR(PAH)] = log [vLv(7.7 um)] - 42.57+-0.2, for SFR in solar masses per year and vLv(7.7 um) the luminosity at the peak of the 7.7 um PAH feature in ergs per s, is found to agree with SFR(radio). Comparing with SFR(UV) determined independently from ultraviolet observations of the same sources with the GALEX mission (not corrected for dust extinction), the median log [SFR(PAH)/SFR(UV)] = 1.67, indicating that only 2% of the ultraviolet continuum typically escapes extinction by dust within a starburst. The ratio SFR(PAH)/SFR(UV) depends on infrared luminosity, with form log…
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