Comparison of H-alpha and UV Star Formation Rates in the Local Volume: Systematic Discrepancies for Dwarf Galaxies
Janice C. Lee, Armando Gil de Paz, Christy Tremonti, Robert C., Kennicutt Jr., Samir Salim, Matthew Bothwell, Daniela Calzetti, Julianne, Dalcanton, Daniel Dale, Chad Engelbracht, Jose G. Funes S.J., Benjamin, Johnson, Shoko Sakai, Evan Skillman, Liese van Zee, Fabian Walter

TL;DR
This study compares star formation rates derived from H-alpha and UV emissions in 300 nearby galaxies, revealing systematic discrepancies in dwarf galaxies that challenge standard assumptions and suggest possible IMF variations.
Contribution
It provides the first statistical analysis of SFR discrepancies in dwarf galaxies using a large, complete sample, highlighting limitations of standard conversion recipes.
Findings
H-alpha under-predicts SFR in low-luminosity dwarf galaxies
Consistency between FUV and H-alpha SFRs in normal spirals after dust correction
Systematic discrepancies increase at SFRs below 0.1 solar masses per year
Abstract
(abridged) Using a complete sample of ~300 star-forming galaxies within 11 Mpc, we evaluate the consistency between star formation rates (SFRs) inferred from the far ultraviolet (FUV) non-ionizing continuum and H-alpha nebular emission, assuming standard conversion recipes in which the SFR scales linearly with luminosity at a given wavelength. Our analysis probes SFRs over 5 orders of magnitude, down to ultra-low activities on the order of ~0.0001 M_sun/yr. The data are drawn from the 11 Mpc H-alpha and Ultraviolet Galaxy Survey (11HUGS), which has obtained H-alpha fluxes from ground-based narrowband imaging, and UV fluxes from imaging with GALEX. For normal spiral galaxies (SFR~1 M_sun/yr), our results are consistent with previous work which has shown that FUV SFRs tend to be lower than H-alpha SFRs before accounting for internal dust attenuation, but that there is relative consistency…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies
