The Optical Depth of H II Regions in the Magellanic Clouds
E. W. Pellegrini, M. S. Oey, P. F. Winkler, S. D. Points, R. C. Smith,, A. E. Jaskot, J. Zastrow

TL;DR
This study uses ionization-parameter mapping and simulations to measure the optical depth of H II regions in the Magellanic Clouds, revealing that a significant fraction are optically thin and contribute to galactic ionization.
Contribution
It introduces a novel application of ionization-parameter mapping combined with simulations to classify H II regions by optical depth in the Magellanic Clouds.
Findings
Optically thin H II regions are more common at higher luminosities.
Optically thin regions dominate at low H I column densities.
Galactic escape fractions of ionizing radiation are estimated to be 4% in the LMC and 11% in the SMC.
Abstract
We exploit ionization-parameter mapping as a powerful tool to measure the optical depth of star-forming HII regions. Our simulations using the photoionization code CLOUDY and our new, SURFBRIGHT surface brightness simulator demonstrate that this technique can directly diagnose most density-bounded, optically thin nebulae using spatially resolved emission line data. We apply this method to the Large and Small Magellanic Clouds, using the data from the Magellanic Clouds Emission Line Survey. We generate new HII region catalogs based on photoionization criteria set by the observed ionization structure in the [SII]/[OIII] ratio and Ha surface brightness. The luminosity functions from these catalogs generally agree with those from Ha-only surveys. We then use ionization-parameter mapping to crudely classify all the nebulae into optically thick vs optically thin categories, yielding…
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