First Views of a Nearby LIRG: Star Formation and Molecular Gas in IRAS 04296+2923
David S. Meier (1,2), Jean L. Turner (3), Sara C. Beck (4), Varoujan, Gorjian (5), Chao-Wei Tsai, (3,6), Schuyler D. Van Dyk (6) ((1) New Mexico, Tech, (2) NRAO, (3) UCLA, (4) Tel Aviv University, (5) Jet Propulsion, Laboratory, (6) Spitzer Science Center)

TL;DR
This study provides the first detailed multi-wavelength analysis of the nearby LIRG IRAS 04296+2923, revealing a nuclear starburst fueled by abundant molecular gas, with implications for understanding bar-driven star formation in spiral galaxies.
Contribution
It offers the first comprehensive multi-wavelength characterization of IRAS 04296+2923, highlighting its nuclear starburst and gas properties, and compares its star formation efficiency to the Milky Way.
Findings
Nuclear starburst equivalent to 10^5 O7 stars.
Star formation rate of ~12 Msun/yr in the nucleus.
High molecular gas content with a CO luminosity comparable to the Milky Way.
Abstract
We present a first look at the local LIRG, IRAS04296+2923. This barred spiral, overlooked because of its location in the Galactic plane, is among the half dozen closest LIRGs. More IR-luminous than either M82 or the Antennae, it may be the best local example of a nuclear starburst caused by bar-mediated secular evolution. We present Palomar J and Pa beta images, VLA maps from 20-1.3cm, a Keck LWS image at 11.7mic and OVRO CO(1-0) and ^13CO(1-0), and 2.7 mm continuum images. The J-band image shows a symmetric barred spiral. Two bright, compact mid-IR/radio sources in the nucleus comprise a starburst that is equivalent to 10^5 O7 stars, probably a pair of young super star clusters separated by 30pc. The nuclear starburst is forming stars at the rate of ~12Msun/yr, half of the total star formation rate for the galaxy of ~25Msun/yr. IRAS04296 is bright in CO, and among the most gas-rich…
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