VLA and ATCA Search for Natal Star Clusters in Nearby Star-Forming Galaxies
Alan Aversa, Kelsey Johnson, Crystal Brogan, W. Goss, D. J. Pisano

TL;DR
This study uses radio observations from VLA and ATCA to identify and analyze natal star clusters in 25 nearby star-forming galaxies, revealing their properties and the relationship with their environments.
Contribution
First radio-based survey to classify and quantify natal star clusters in multiple galaxies, linking radio emission characteristics to cluster properties.
Findings
Only 5 galaxies have thermal radio sources indicating young star clusters.
Detected clusters range from large OB-associations to super star clusters.
Radio luminosities imply clusters with up to ~7x10^3 O7.5 V stars.
Abstract
In order to investigate the relationship between the local environment and the properties of natal star clusters, we obtained radio observations of 25 star-forming galaxies within 20 Mpc using the Very Large Array (VLA) and the Australia Telescope Compact Array (ATCA). Natal star-forming regions can be identified by their characteristic thermal radio emission, which is manifest in their spectral index at centimeter wavelengths. The host galaxies in our sample were selected based upon their likelihood of harboring young star formation. In star-forming regions, the ionizing flux of massive embedded stars powers the dominant thermal free-free emission of those sources, resulting in a spectral index of {\alpha} {\gtrsim} -0.2 (where S{\nu} {\propto} {\nu}{\alpha}), which we compute. With the current sensitivity, we find that of the 25 galaxies in this sample only five have radio sources…
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