Comparison of star formation rates from Halpha and infrared luminosities as seen by Herschel
H. Dom\'inguez, M. Mignoli, F. Pozzi, F. Calura, A. Cimatti, C., Gruppioni, J. Cepa, M. S\'anchez-Portal, G. Zamorani, S. Berta, D. Elbaz, E., LeFloc'h, G. L. Granato, D. Lutz, R. Maiolino, F. Mateucci, P. Nair, R., Nordon, L. Pozzetti, L. Silva, J. Silverman, S. Wuyts

TL;DR
This study compares star formation rates derived from Halpha emission and infrared luminosity in a sample of galaxies, finding strong agreement and highlighting the impact of metallicity on the SFR estimates.
Contribution
It provides an empirical validation of the relation between SFR from infrared and Halpha, incorporating galaxy properties and dust evolution models.
Findings
Excellent correlation between SFR(Ha) and SFR(LIR) with slope ~1.
Metallicity significantly influences the SFR ratio, varying by 0.6 dex.
Good agreement across morphological types, with some variation in irregular galaxies.
Abstract
We empirically test the relation between the SFR(LIR) derived from the infrared luminosity, LIR, and the SFR(Ha) derived from the Ha emission line luminosity using simple conversion relations. We use a sample of 474 galaxies at z = 0.06 - 0.46 with both Ha detection (from 20k zCOSMOS survey) and new far-IR Herschel data (100 and 160 {\mu}m). We derive SFR(Ha) from the Ha extinction corrected emission line luminosity. We find a very clear trend between E(B - V) and LIR that allows to estimate extinction values for each galaxy even if the Ha emission line measurement is not reliable. We calculate the LIR by integrating from 8 up to 1000 {\mu}m the SED that is best fitting our data. We compare SFR(Ha) with the SFR(LIR). We find a very good agreement between the two SFR estimates, with a slope of m = 1.01 \pm 0.03 in the SFR(LIR) vs SFR(Ha) diagram, a normalization constant of a = -0.08 \pm…
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