First survey of Wolf-Rayet star populations over the full extension of nearby galaxies observed with CALIFA
D. Miralles-Caballero, A. I. D\'iaz, \'A. R. L\'opez-S\'anchez, F. F., Rosales-Ortega, A. Monreal-Ibero, E. P\'erez-Montero, C. Kehrig, R., Garc\'ia-Benito, S. F. S\'anchez, C. J. Walcher, L. Galbany, J., Iglesias-P\'aramo, J. M. V\'ilchez, R. M. Gonz\'alez Delgado

TL;DR
This study develops an automated pixel-by-pixel analysis method to identify Wolf-Rayet star regions in nearby galaxies using CALIFA data, creating the first spatially-resolved catalog and exploring their properties and implications.
Contribution
It introduces a novel automated technique for detecting WR features in integral field spectroscopy data and provides the first catalog of WR-rich regions with spatial resolution.
Findings
44 WR-rich regions identified across 25 galaxies
Majority of host galaxies show signs of interaction
Simple stellar models do not fully explain WR observations
Abstract
The search of extragalactic regions with conspicuous presence of Wolf-Rayet (WR) stars outside the Local Group is challenging task due to the difficulties in detecting their faint spectral features. In this exploratory work, we develop a methodology to perform an automated search of WR signatures through a pixel-by-pixel analysis of integral field spectroscopy (IFS) data belonging to the Calar Alto Legacy Integral Field Area survey, CALIFA. This technique allowed us to build the first catalogue of Wolf-Rayet rich regions with spatially-resolved information, allowing to study the properties of these complexes in a 2D context. The detection technique is based on the identification of the blue WR bump (around He II 4686 {\AA}, mainly associated to nitrogen-rich WR stars, WN) and the red WR bump (around C IV 5808 {\AA} and associated to carbon-rich WR stars, WC) using a pixel-by-pixel…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
