The reliability of [CII] as a star formation rate indicator
Ilse De Looze, Maarten Baes, George J. Bendo, Luca Cortese, Jacopo, Fritz

TL;DR
This paper calibrates the [CII] 157.74 μm line as a star formation rate indicator using a sample of nearby galaxies, establishing a correlation between [CII] luminosity and SFR, with considerations for galaxy type and activity level.
Contribution
It provides a new calibration of [CII] luminosity as a star formation rate indicator based on a sample of 24 nearby galaxies, accounting for different galaxy types.
Findings
[CII] luminosity correlates well with SFR in normal star-forming galaxies.
Non-linearity observed in ultraluminous and quiescent galaxies affects the calibration.
Two explanations for the [CII]-SFR correlation involve PDRs near star-forming regions.
Abstract
The [CII] 157.74 \mu m line is an important coolant for the neutral interstellar gas. Since [CII] is the brightest spectral line for most galaxies, it is a potentially powerful tracer of star formation activity. In this paper we present a calibration of the star formation rate as a function of the [CII] luminosity for a sample of 24 star-forming galaxies in the nearby universe. This sample includes objects classified as HII regions or LINERs, but omits all Seyfert galaxies with a significant AGN contribution to the mid-infrared photometry. In order to calibrate the SFR against the line luminosity, we rely on both GALEX FUV data, which is an ideal tracer of the unobscured star formation, and MIPS 24 \mu m, to probe the dust-enshrouded fraction of star formation. In case of normal star-forming galaxies, the [CII] luminosity correlates well with the star formation rate. However, the…
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