A Radio Continuum Study of Dwarf Galaxies: 6 cm imaging of Little Things
Luke Hindson, Ged Kitchener, Elias Brinks, Volker Heesen, Jonathan, Westcott, Deidre Hunter, Hong-Xin Zhang, Michael Rupen, Urvashi Rau

TL;DR
This study uses 6 cm radio imaging of 40 nearby dwarf galaxies to evaluate radio continuum as an extinction-free star formation indicator, revealing high magnetic fields and a complex relation with star formation rates.
Contribution
It provides new high-resolution radio continuum observations of dwarf galaxies, demonstrating their magnetic field properties and assessing the reliability of radio emission as a star formation tracer.
Findings
Radio emission detected in 22 of 40 dwarf galaxies, 8 are new detections.
Dwarf galaxies show magnetic fields of 5-8 μG, with localized regions up to 50 μG.
Radio continuum correlates with star formation in regions but is suppressed across entire disks.
Abstract
In this paper we examine to what extent the radio continuum can be used as an extinction free probe of star formation in dwarf galaxies. To that aim we observe nearby dwarf galaxies with the Very Large Array at 6 cm (- GHz) in C-configuration. We obtained images with - resolution and noise levels of -. We detected emission associated with of the dwarf galaxies, of which are new detections. The general picture is that of an interstellar medium largely devoid of radio continuum emission, interspersed by isolated pockets of emission associated with star formation. We find an average thermal fraction of -% and an average magnetic field strength of -, only slightly lower than that found in larger, spiral galaxies. At 100 pc scales, we find surprisingly high values for the…
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