Unveiling Extragalactic Star Formation Using Radio Recombination Lines: An EVLA Pilot Study with NGC 253
Amanda A. Kepley, Laura Chomiuk, Kelsey E. Johnson, W.M. Goss, Dana S., Balser, and D.J. Pisano

TL;DR
This study demonstrates the successful detection of radio recombination lines in NGC 253 using EVLA, revealing complex ionized gas dynamics and showcasing EVLA's efficiency for extragalactic RRL observations.
Contribution
First detection of H58a and H59a RRLs in NGC 253 with EVLA, confirming the method's effectiveness for studying extragalactic star-forming regions.
Findings
Detected H58a and H59a RRLs in NGC 253
Constrained thermal gas density to 1.4-4 x 10^4 cm^-3
Estimated ionizing photon flux of 10^53 s^-1
Abstract
Radio recombination lines (RRLs) are powerful, extinction-free diagnostics of the ionized gas in young, star-forming regions. Unfortunately, these lines are difficult to detect in external galaxies. We present the results of EVLA observations of the RRL and radio continuum emission at 33 GHz from NGC 253, a nearby nuclear starburst galaxy. We detect the previously unobserved H58a and H59a RRLs and make simultaneous sensitive measurements of the continuum. We measure integrated line fluxes of W m and W m for the H58a and H59a lines, respectively. The thermal gas in NGC 253 is kinematically complex with multiple velocity components. We constrain the density of the thermal gas to cm and estimate an ionizing photon flux of s. We use the RRL kinematics and the derived ionizing photon flux to…
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