Tracing the sites of obscured star formation in the Antennae galaxies with Herschel-PACS
Ulrich Klaas (1), Markus Nielbock (1), Martin Haas (2), Oliver Krause, (1), J\"urgen Schreiber (1) ((1) Max-Planck-Institut f\"ur Astronomie,, Heidelberg, Germany (2) Astronomisches Institu, Ruhr-Universit\"at Bochum,, Bochum, Germany)

TL;DR
This study uses Herschel-PACS FIR imaging to resolve and analyze individual star-forming knots in the Antennae galaxies, revealing their properties, activity levels, and stages of evolution with unprecedented detail.
Contribution
It provides the first complete assessment of star-forming knots in the FIR in the Antennae, combining high-resolution imaging with multi-wavelength data to analyze their properties and evolutionary stages.
Findings
Identified the most active star-forming knot with high dust heating and star formation rate.
Discovered different stages of star formation in knots, indicating diverse evolutionary states.
Provided data to improve numerical simulations of galaxy interactions and star formation.
Abstract
FIR imaging of interacting galaxies allows locating even hidden sites of star formation and measuring of the relative strength of nuclear and extra-nuclear star formation. We want to resolve the star-forming sites in the nearby system of the Antennae. Thanks to the unprecedented sharpness and depth of the PACS camera onboard ESA's Herschel Space Observatory, it is possible for the first time to achieve a complete assessment of individual star-forming knots in the FIR with scan maps at 70, 100, and 160 um. We used clump extraction photometry and SED diagnostics to derive the properties related to star-forming activity. The PACS 70, 100, and 160 um maps trace the knotty structure of the most recent star formation along an arc between the two nuclei in the overlap area. The resolution of the starburst knots and additional multi-wavelength data allow their individual star formation history…
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