The Calibration of Monochromatic Far-Infrared Star Formation Rate Indicators
D. Calzetti (UMass), S.-Y. Wu (UMass), S. Hong (UMass), R. C., Kennicutt (IofA, Cambridge), J. C. Lee (Carnegie Obs.), D.A. Dale (U, Wyoning), C. W. Engelbracht (U Arizona), L. van Zee (U Indiana), B. T. Draine, (Princeton U), C.-N. Hao (Tianjin Normal U; IofA, Cambridge)

TL;DR
This study evaluates the effectiveness of using monochromatic infrared emission at 70 and 160 microns as indicators of star formation rates in nearby galaxies, identifying luminosity thresholds for reliable calibration.
Contribution
It provides new calibration relations for SFR using 70 and 160 micron luminosities, accounting for galaxy luminosity and metallicity effects, improving previous methods.
Findings
Linear SFR-luminosity relations above certain luminosity thresholds.
Increased dispersion in SFR estimates at longer wavelengths.
Infrared luminosity less reliable for low-metallicity, less dusty galaxies.
Abstract
(Abridged) Spitzer data at 24, 70, and 160 micron and ground-based H-alpha images are analyzed for a sample of 189 nearby star-forming and starburst galaxies to investigate whether reliable star formation rate (SFR) indicators can be defined using the monochromatic infrared dust emission centered at 70 and 160 micron. We compare recently published recipes for SFR measures using combinations of the 24 micron and observed H-alpha luminosities with those using 24 micron luminosity alone. From these comparisons, we derive a reference SFR indicator for use in our analysis. Linear correlations between SFR and the 70 and 160 micron luminosity are found for L(70)>=1.4x10^{42} erg/s and L(160)>=2x10^{42} erg/s, corresponding to SFR>=0.1-0.3 M_sun/yr. Below those two luminosity limits, the relation between SFR and 70 micron (160 micron) luminosity is non-linear and SFR calibrations become…
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