A Comparative Study of Knots of Star Formation in Interacting vs. Spiral Galaxies
Beverly J. Smith, Javier Zaragoza-Cardiel, Curtis Struck, Susan, Olmsted, Keith Jones

TL;DR
This study compares star formation in ~700 regions of interacting and spiral galaxies, revealing that interacting galaxies host more luminous, dustier, and more active star-forming knots, especially at structural intersections.
Contribution
It provides a detailed comparative analysis of star-forming complexes in interacting versus normal spiral galaxies using multi-wavelength data, highlighting differences in luminosity, dust, and star formation activity.
Findings
Interacting galaxies have more high star formation rate regions.
Star-forming knots in interactions are larger and more luminous.
High luminosity regions follow the Calzetti dust law.
Abstract
Interacting galaxies are known to have higher global rates of star formation on average than normal galaxies, relative to their stellar masses. Using UV and IR photometry combined with new and published H-alpha images, we have compared the star formation rates of ~700 star forming complexes in 46 nearby interacting galaxy pairs with those of regions in 39 normal spiral galaxies. The interacting galaxies have proportionally more regions with high star formation rates than the spirals. The most extreme regions in the interacting systems lie at the intersections of spiral/tidal structures, where gas is expected to pile up and trigger star formation. Published Hubble Telescope images show unusually large and luminous star clusters in the highest luminosity regions. The star formation rates of the clumps correlate with measures of the dust attenuation, consistent with the idea that regions…
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