UV+IR Star Formation Rates: Hickson Compact Groups with Swift and Spitzer
P. Tzanavaris (1,2), A. E. Hornschemeier (1), S. C. Gallagher (3), K., E. Johnson (4), C. Gronwall (5), S. Immler (1,6), A. E. Reines (4), E., Hoversten (5), J. C. Charlton (5) ((1)NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center,, (2)Johns Hopkins University, (3)University of Western Ontario

TL;DR
This study measures star formation rates in Hickson Compact Group galaxies using UV and IR data, revealing a bimodal distribution linked to galaxy type and environment, indicating rapid evolution in dense settings.
Contribution
It introduces a combined UV and IR approach to quantify star formation and uncovers a bimodal SSFR distribution associated with galaxy morphology and group environment.
Findings
Bimodal SSFR distribution correlates with galaxy type.
High SSFR linked to MIR activity and spiral/irregular morphology.
Environment influences galaxy evolution speed in compact groups.
Abstract
We present Swift UVOT (1600-3000A) 3-band photometry for 41 galaxies in 11 nearby (<4500km/s) Hickson Compact Groups (HCGs) of galaxies. We use the uvw2-band (2000A) to estimate the dust-unobscured component, SFR_UV, of the total star-formation rate, SFR_T. We use Spitzer MIPS 24-micron photometry to estimate SFR_IR, the dust-obscured component of SFR_T. We obtain SFR_T=SFR_UV+SFR_IR. Using 2MASS K_s band based stellar mass, M*, estimates, we calculate specific SFRs, SSFR=SFR_T/M*. SSFR values show a clear and significant bimodality, with a gap between low (<~3.2x10^-11 / yr) and high SSFR (>~1.2x10^-10 / yr) systems. All galaxies with MIR activity index a_IRAC <= 0 (>0) are in the high- (low-) SSFR locus, as expected if high levels of star-formation power MIR emission from polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon molecules and a hot dust continuum. All elliptical/S0 galaxies are in the low-SSFR…
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