[FeII] as a tracer of Supernova Rate in Near-by Starburst Galaxies
M. J. F. Rosenberg, P. P. van der Werf, F. P. Israel

TL;DR
This study establishes a strong linear correlation between near-infrared [FeII] emission and supernova rates in nearby starburst galaxies, enabling [FeII] as a reliable tracer for supernova activity and star formation history.
Contribution
It provides a quantitative relationship between [FeII]$_{1.26}$ luminosity and supernova rate, validated with pixel-level analysis and comparison to radio-derived rates.
Findings
Strong linear correlation between [FeII] emission and supernova rate.
Derived supernova rates agree with radio-based measurements.
Relation valid for normal star-forming galaxies, not ultra-luminous ones.
Abstract
Supernovae play an integral role in the feedback of processed material into the ISM of galaxies and are responsible for much of the chemical enrichment of the universe. The rate of supernovae can also reveal the star formation histories. Supernova rates are usually measured through the non-thermal radio continuum luminosity; however, a correlation between near-infrared [FeII] emission and supernova remnants has also been noted. We aim to find a quantitative relationship between the [FeII] at 1.26 um ([FeII]) luminosity and supernova rate in a sample of 11 near-by starburst galaxy centers. We perform a pixel-pixel analysis of this correlation on SINFONI data cubes. Using Br equivalent width and luminosity as the only observational inputs into the Starburst 99 model, we derive the supernova rate at each pixel and thus create maps of supernova rates. We then compare these…
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