Clumpy galaxies seen in H-alpha: inflated observed clump properties due to limited spatial resolution and sensitivity
Valentina Tamburello, Alireza Rahmati, Lucio Mayer, Antonio Cava,, Miroslava Dessauges-Zavadsky, Daniel Schaerer

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that limited spatial resolution and sensitivity in observations cause overestimations of clump sizes and masses in high-redshift galaxies, emphasizing the need for ~100 pc resolution to accurately characterize star-forming clumps.
Contribution
The paper shows how observational limitations inflate the apparent properties of galactic clumps and provides a method to correct for these effects using high-resolution simulations and radiative transfer modeling.
Findings
100 pc resolution recovers intrinsic clump properties
1 kpc resolution causes clump merging and overestimation
Limited sensitivity further inflates mass estimates
Abstract
High-resolution simulations of star-forming massive galactic discs have shown that clumps form with a characteristic baryonic mass in the range , with a small tail exceeding produced by clump-clump mergers. This is in contrast with the observed kpc-size clumps with masses up to in high-redshift star-forming galaxies. In this paper we show that the comparison between simulated and observed star-forming clumps is hindered by limited observational spatial resolution and sensitivity. We post-process high-resolution hydrodynamical simulations of clumpy discs using accurate radiative transfer to model the effect of ionizing radiation from young stars and to compute H emission maps. By comparing the intrinsic clump size and mass distributions with those inferred from convolving the H maps with different gaussian…
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