Multi-scale Radio-IR Correlations in M31 and M33: The Role of Magnetic Fields and Star Formation
F. S. Tabatabaei, E. M. Berkhuijsen, P. Frick, R. Beck, and E., Schinnerer

TL;DR
This study examines how magnetic fields and star formation influence the radio-IR correlation in galaxies M31 and M33 across multiple spatial scales, revealing the role of cosmic ray propagation and magnetic field structure.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the scale-dependent radio-IR correlation and links cosmic ray diffusion lengths to magnetic field properties within galaxies.
Findings
Synchrotron-IR correlation varies with scale and galaxy.
Cosmic ray propagation length differs between M31 and M33.
Magnetic field structure influences cosmic ray diffusion and radio-IR correlation.
Abstract
Interstellar magnetic fields and the propagation of cosmic ray electrons have an important impact on the radio-infrared (IR) correlation in galaxies. This becomes evident when studying different spatial scales within galaxies. We investigate the correlation between the infrared (IR) and free-free/synchrotron radio continuum emission at 20 cm from the two local group galaxies M31 and M33 on spatial scales between 0.4 and 10 kpc. The multi-scale radio-IR correlations have been carried out using a wavelet analysis. The free-free and IR emission are correlated on all scales, but on some scales the synchrotron emission is only marginally correlated with the IR emission. The synchrotron-IR correlation is stronger in M33 than in M31 on small scales (<1 kpc), but it is weaker than in M31 on larger scales. Taking the smallest scale on which the synchrotron-IR correlation exists as the…
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