Synchrotron spectral index and interstellar medium densities of star-forming galaxies
Aritra Basu, Rainer Beck, Philip Schmidt, Subhashis Roy

TL;DR
This study measures the synchrotron spectral index in four nearby star-forming galaxies, revealing how it varies with interstellar medium density and providing insights into cosmic ray electron energy losses and magnetic field effects.
Contribution
It presents the first detailed spatially-resolved analysis of synchrotron spectral index variations in multiple galaxies at sub-kpc scales, linking spectral changes to ISM density and cosmic ray physics.
Findings
Spectral index is flatter in high gas density regions.
Spectral index steepens in low-density, outer regions.
Galaxy-integrated spectrum remains a power-law across 0.1 to 10 GHz.
Abstract
The spectral index of synchrotron emission is an important parameter in understanding the properties of cosmic ray electrons (CREs) and the interstellar medium (ISM). We determine the synchrotron spectral index () of four nearby star-forming galaxies, namely NGC 4736, NGC 5055, NGC 5236 and NGC 6946 at sub-kpc linear scales. The was determined between 0.33 and 1.4 GHz for all the galaxies. We find the spectral index to be flatter () in regions with total neutral (atomic + molecular) gas surface density, , typically in the arms and inner parts of the galaxies. In regions with , especially in the interarm and outer regions of the galaxies, the spectral index steepens sharply to . The flattening of is unlikely to be…
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