Spectral Energy Distributions of HII regions in M33 (HerM33es)
M. Relano, S. Verley, I. Perez, C. Kramer, D. Calzetti, E. M., Xilouris, M. Boquien, J. Abreu-Vicente, F. Combes, F. Israel, F. S., Tabatabaei, J. Braine, C. Buchbender, M. Gonzalez, P. Gratier, S. Lord, B., Mookerjea, G. Quintana-Lacaci, P. van der Werf

TL;DR
This study analyzes the spectral energy distributions of 119 HII regions in M33, revealing how morphology influences dust properties, emission ratios, and the physical conditions within these regions.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive catalogue of HII regions with morphological classification and detailed SED analysis, linking morphology to dust temperature, mass, and ionized gas properties.
Findings
Mixed and filled regions show higher 24μm emission than shells.
FIR peak shifts to longer wavelengths in shells, indicating colder dust.
Derived dust masses range from 10^2 to 10^4 solar masses.
Abstract
Within the framework of the Herschel M 33 extended survey HerM33es we study the Spectral Energy Distribution (SED) of a set of HII regions in M 33 as a function of the morphology. We present a catalogue of 119 HII regions morphologically classified: 9 filled, 47 mixed, 36 shell, and 27 clear shell HII regions. For each object we extract the photometry at twelve available wavelength bands (from FUV-1516A to IR-250mi) and obtain the SED. We also obtain emission line profiles across the regions to study the location of the stellar, ionised gas, and dust components. We find trends for the SEDs related to the morphology, showing that the star and gas-dust configuration affects the ratios of the emission in different bands. The mixed and filled regions show higher emission at 24mi than the shells and clear shells, which could be due to the proximity of the dust to the stellar clusters in the…
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