Characterizing spiral arm and interarm star formation
K. Kreckel, G. A. Blanc, E. Schinnerer, B. Groves, A. Adamo, A., Hughes, S. Meidt

TL;DR
This study uses detailed optical spectroscopy of NGC 628 to analyze star-forming regions, finding that most properties are environment-independent, with implications for understanding star formation processes in spiral galaxies.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis of HII regions in both arm and interarm areas, revealing environment-independent properties and the role of diffuse ionized gas in star formation.
Findings
HII region properties are similar in arm and interarm environments.
Diffuse ionized gas contributes significantly to Halpha emission.
Depletion times are consistent across environments, around 2 billion years.
Abstract
Interarm star formation contributes significantly to a galaxy's star formation budget, and provides an opportunity to study stellar birthplaces unperturbed by spiral arm dynamics. Using optical integral field spectroscopy of the nearby galaxy NGC 628 with VLT/MUSE, we construct Halpha maps including detailed corrections for dust extinction and stellar absorption to identify 391 HII regions at 35pc resolution over 12 kpc^2. Using tracers sensitive to the underlying gravitational potential, we associate HII regions with either arm (271) or interarm (120) environments. Using our full spectral coverage of each region, we find that most HII region physical properties (luminosity, size, metallicity, ionization parameter) are independent of environment. We calculate the fraction of Halpha luminosity due to the diffuse ionized gas (DIG) background contaminating each HII region, and find the DIG…
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