Aperture corrections for disk galaxy properties derived from the CALIFA survey. Balmer emission lines in spiral galaxies
J. Iglesias-P\'aramo, J.M. V\'ilchez, L. Galbany, S.F. S\'anchez, F.F., Rosales-Ortega, D. Mast, R. Garc\'ia-Benito, B. Husemann, J.A.L. Aguerri, J., Alves, S. Bekerait\'e, J. Bland-Hawthorn, C. Catal\'an-Torrecilla, A.L. de, Amorim, A. de Lorenzo-C\'aceres, S. Ellis

TL;DR
This study analyzes how aperture size affects measurements of star formation and dust in spiral galaxies using CALIFA survey data, providing correction methods for certain properties.
Contribution
It introduces aperture correction formulas for Balmer emission lines in spiral galaxies based on spatially-resolved spectroscopy from CALIFA.
Findings
Halpha flux growth curves are well-defined with low dispersion.
No significant differential dust attenuation as a function of radius.
Large dispersion in EW(Halpha) for small apertures limits correction reliability.
Abstract
This work investigates the effect of the aperture size on derived galaxy properties for which we have spatially-resolved optical spectra. We focus on some indicators of star formation activity and dust attenuation for spiral galaxies that have been widely used in previous work on galaxy evolution. We have used 104 spiral galaxies from the CALIFA survey for which 2D spectroscopy with complete spatial coverage is available. From the 3D cubes we have derived growth curves of the most conspicuous Balmer emission lines (Halpha, Hbeta) for circular apertures of different radii centered at the galaxy's nucleus after removing the underlying stellar continuum. We find that the Halpha flux (f(Halpha)) growth curve follows a well defined sequence with aperture radius showing low dispersion around the median value. From this analysis, we derive aperture corrections for galaxies in different…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Adaptive optics and wavefront sensing
