On recent SFR calibrations and the constant SFR approximation
M. Cervino, A. Bongiovanni, S. Hidalgo

TL;DR
This paper critically examines the constant SFR approximation in star formation rate inferences, revealing its deeper connection to stellar population evolution and proposing methods to improve SFR estimates using galaxy colors and spectral indices.
Contribution
It demonstrates that the constant SFR approximation is a simplified view of SSP evolution and offers a new framework to refine SFR inferences without assuming steady-state luminosities.
Findings
Best SFR calibration age is the system's age (~13 Gyr for z=0)
Constant SFR and steady luminosities are not necessary for calibration
Using galaxy colors and spectral indices can correct for old stellar contributions
Abstract
Star Formation Rate (SFR) inferences are based in the so-called constant SFR approximation, where synthesis models are require to provide a calibration; we aims to study the key points of such approximation to produce accurate SFR inferences. We use the intrinsic algebra used in synthesis models, and we explore how SFR can be inferred from the integrated light without any assumption about the underling Star Formation history (SFH). We show that the constant SFR approximation is actually a simplified expression of more deeper characteristics of synthesis models: It is a characterization of the evolution of single stellar populations (SSPs), acting the SSPs as sensitivity curve over different measures of the SFH can be obtained. As results, we find that (1) the best age to calibrate SFR indices is the age of the observed system (i.e. about 13Gyr for z=0 systems); (2) constant SFR and…
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