The Star Formation in Radio Survey: Jansky Very Large Array 33 GHz Observations of Nearby Galaxy Nuclei and Extranuclear Star-Forming Regions
E.J.Murphy, D. Dong, E. Momjian, S. Linden, R.C.Kennicutt, Jr., D.S., Meier, E. Schinnerer, and J.L. Turner

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution 33 GHz radio observations to analyze star-forming regions in nearby galaxy nuclei and disks, revealing that most emission traces discrete HII regions and providing insights into extinction and embedded phases of star formation.
Contribution
First high-resolution 33 GHz imaging survey of galaxy nuclei and extranuclear regions, quantifying emission recovery, extinction, and star formation indicators at 30-300 pc scales.
Findings
78% of flux recovered at kpc scales
Median extinction A_Hα ≈ 1.26 mag
10% of sources highly embedded
Abstract
We present 33 GHz imaging for 112 pointings towards galaxy nuclei and extranuclear star-forming regions at 2" resolution using the Karl G. Jansky Very Large Array (VLA) as part of the Star Formation in Radio Survey. A comparison with 33 GHz Robert C. Byrd Green Bank Telescope single-dish observations indicates that the interferometric VLA observations recover of the total flux density over 25" regions ( kpc-scales) among all fields. On these scales, the emission being resolved out is most likely diffuse non-thermal synchrotron emission. Consequently, on the pc scales sampled by our VLA observations, the bulk of the 33 GHz emission is recovered and primarily powered by free-free emission from discrete HII regions, making it an excellent tracer of massive star formation. Of the 225 discrete regions used for aperture photometry, 162 are…
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