Starburst evolution: free-free absorption in the radio spectra of luminous IRAS galaxies
M. S. Clemens, A. Scaife, O. Vega, A. Bressan

TL;DR
This study investigates the radio spectra of luminous IRAS galaxies, revealing diverse spectral shapes and free-free absorption effects, which inform on star formation activity and ionized gas properties in starburst environments.
Contribution
It provides new insights into free-free absorption in galaxy radio spectra and estimates ionized gas lifetimes, enhancing understanding of starburst evolution.
Findings
Radio spectra show diverse forms and turn-overs below 1.4 GHz.
Multiple components with different free-free turn-overs indicate varied emission regions.
Ionized gas lifetimes exceed HII region lifetimes, suggesting ongoing star formation.
Abstract
We describe radio observations at 244 and 610 MHz of a sample of 20 luminous and ultra-luminous IRAS galaxies. These are a sub-set of a sample of 31 objects that have well-measured radio spectra up to at least 23 GHz. The radio spectra of these objects below 1.4 GHz show a great variety of forms and are rarely a simple power-law extrapolation of the synchrotron spectra at higher frequencies. Most objects of this class have spectral turn-overs or bends in their radio spectra. We interpret these spectra in terms of free-free absorption in the starburst environment. Several objects show radio spectra with two components having free-free turn-overs at different frequencies (including Arp 220 and Arp 299), indicating that synchrotron emission originates from regions with very different emission measures. In these sources, using a simple model for the supernova rate, we estimate the time…
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