Multiwavelength study of the star formation in the bar of NGC 2903
G. Popping (1), I. Perez (2,3), A. Zurita (2,3) ((1) Kapteyn, Astronomical Institute. RUG, the Netherlands (2) Dpto. Fisica Teorica y del, Cosmos. Universidad de Granada, Spain (3) Instituto "Carlos I" de Fisica, Teorica y Computacional. Universidad de Granada, Spain)

TL;DR
This study combines multiwavelength data to analyze star formation in NGC 2903's bar, revealing complex morphology and age distributions of star-forming regions, with results consistent across different star formation rate indicators.
Contribution
It provides a detailed multiwavelength analysis of star formation in the bar of NGC 2903, highlighting morphological differences and age estimates of star-forming regions.
Findings
UV emission regions are older (150-320 Myr) than the very young (<10 Myr) UV knots.
Star formation rate from UV and H-alpha data are consistent (~0.4 M_sun/yr).
The galaxy exhibits complex morphology with different features in various spectral bands.
Abstract
NGC 2903 is a nearby barred spiral with an active starburst in the center and Hii regions distributed along its bar. We aim to analyse the star formation properties in the bar region of NGC 2903 and study the links with the typical bar morphological features. A combination of space and ground-based data from the far-ultraviolet to the sub-millimeter spectral ranges is used to create a panchromatic view of the NGC 2903 bar. We produce two catalogues: one for the current star formation regions, as traced by the halpha compact emission, and a second one for the ultraviolet (UV) emitting knots, containing positions and luminosities. From them we have obtained ultraviolet colours, star formation rates, dust attenuation and halpha EWs, and their spatial distribution have been analysed. Stellar cluster ages have been estimated using stellar population synthesis models (Starburst99). NGC 2903…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
