Arm & Interarm Star Formation in Spiral Galaxies
Kelly Foyle, Hans-Walter Rix, Fabian Walter, Adam Leroy

TL;DR
This study examines how spiral arms influence star formation in different types of spiral galaxies, finding that most star formation occurs in interarm regions and spiral arms mainly concentrate gas rather than trigger star formation.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of star formation distribution in spiral arms versus interarm regions across multiple galaxies, highlighting the limited role of arms in triggering star formation.
Findings
Majority of star formation occurs in interarm regions.
Spiral arms mainly concentrate gas, not significantly trigger star formation.
No substantial enhancement of star formation efficiency in spiral arms.
Abstract
We investigate the relationship between spiral arms and star formation in the grand-design spirals NGC 5194 and NGC 628 and in the flocculent spiral NGC 6946. Filtered maps of near-IR (3.6 micron) emission allow us to identify "arm regions" that should correspond to regions of stellar mass density enhancements. The two grand-design spirals show a clear two-armed structure, while NGC 6946 is more complex. We examine these arm and interarm regions, looking at maps that trace recent star formation - far-ultraviolet (GALEX NGS) and 24 micron emission (Spitzer, SINGS) - and cold gas - CO (Heracles) and HI (Things). We find the star formation tracers and CO more concentrated in the spiral arms than the stellar 3.6 micron flux. If we define the spiral arms as the 25% highest pixels in the filtered 3.6 micron images, we find that the majority (60%) of star formation tracers occurs in the…
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