Infrared Narrow-Band Tomography of the Local Starburst NGC 1569 with LBT/LUCIFER
A. Pasquali (1), A. Bik (1), S. Zibetti (1), N. Ageorges (2), W., Seifert (3), W. Brandner (1), H.-W. Rix (1), M Juette (4), V. Knierim (4), P., Buschkamp (2), C. Feiz (3), H. Gemperlein (2), A. Germeroth (3), R. Hoffmann, (2), W. Laun (1), R. Lederer (2), M. Lehmitz (1)

TL;DR
This study used near-infrared imaging and spectroscopy with LBT/LUCIFER to map star formation, dust extinction, and supernova activity in NGC 1569, revealing spatial variations and recent starburst history.
Contribution
First detailed near-IR spatial mapping of multiple emission lines in NGC 1569, linking star formation, dust, and supernova activity with high spatial resolution.
Findings
Dust extinction is patchy and higher in the NW region.
Star formation rate peaks in the NW, reaching 4 x 10^-6 M_sun yr^-1 pc^-2.
Recent starburst occurred about 4 million years ago, producing ~1.8 million solar masses of stars.
Abstract
We used the near-IR imager/spectrograph LUCIFER mounted on the Large Binocular Telescope (LBT) to image, with sub-arcsec seeing, the local dwarf starburst NGC 1569 in the JHK bands and HeI 1.08 micron, [FeII] 1.64 micron and Brgamma narrow-band filters. We obtained high-quality spatial maps of HeI, [FeII] and Brgamma emission across the galaxy, and used them together with HST/ACS images of NGC 1569 in the Halpha filter to derive the two-dimensional spatial map of the dust extinction and surface star formation rate density. We show that dust extinction is rather patchy and, on average, higher in the North-West (NW) portion of the galaxy [E_g(B-V) = 0.71 mag] than in the South-East [E_g(B-V) = 0.57 mag]. Similarly, the surface density of star formation rate peaks in the NW region of NGC 1569, reaching a value of about 4 x 10^-6 M_sun yr^-1 pc^-2. The total star formation rate as estimated…
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