Measuring star formation with resolved observations: the test case of M33
M. Boquien, D. Calzetti, S. Aalto, A. Boselli, J. Braine, V. Buat, F., Combes, F. Israel, C. Kramer, S. Lord, M. Relano, E. Rosolowsky, G. Stacey,, F. Tabatabaei, F. van der Tak, P. van der Werf, S. Verley, M. Xilouris

TL;DR
This study investigates how spatial resolution affects the measurement of star formation rates in galaxy M33, revealing scale-dependent discrepancies and the unreliability of monochromatic estimators at small scales.
Contribution
It provides a multi-scale analysis of star formation indicators in M33, highlighting the impact of spatial resolution on SFR estimates and reddening variations.
Findings
Discrepancies up to a factor of 3 between SFR estimators at different scales.
Strong dependence of IR-SFR scaling factors on spatial scale and star formation intensity.
Variation of differential reddening with specific SFR and resolution.
Abstract
Context. Measuring star formation at a local scale is important to constrain star formation laws. Yet, it is not clear whether and how the measure of star formation is affected by the spatial scale at which a galaxy is observed. Aims. We want to understand the impact of the resolution on the determination of the spatially resolved star formation rate (SFR) and other directly associated physical parameters such as the attenuation. Methods. We have carried out a multi-scale, pixel-by-pixel study of the nearby galaxy M33. Assembling FUV, Halpha, 8, 24, 70, and 100 micron maps, we have systematically compared the emission in individual bands with various SFR estimators from a resolution of 33 pc to 2084 pc. Results. We have found that there are strong, scale-dependent, discrepancies up to a factor 3 between monochromatic SFR estimators and Halpha+24 micron. The scaling factors between…
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