The gamma-ray / infrared luminosity correlation of star-forming galaxies
P. Kornecki, L. J. Pellizza, S. del Palacio, A. L. M\"uller, J. F., Albacete-Colombo, and G. E. Romero

TL;DR
This study refines the understanding of the gamma-ray luminosity and star formation rate relation in star-forming galaxies, revealing a steeper, less biased correlation and insights into cosmic-ray transport mechanisms.
Contribution
It provides a corrected, steeper gamma-ray/star formation rate relation and explains the physical processes influencing cosmic-ray escape in galaxies.
Findings
The actual gamma-ray luminosity-star formation rate relation has a power-law index of 1.35.
Infra-red based estimates bias the relation towards shallower slopes.
Cosmic-ray cooling regions are kiloparsec-sized with winds influencing escape mechanisms.
Abstract
Context. Near a dozen star-forming galaxies have been detected in gamma-rays by the Fermi observatory in the last decade. A remarkable property of this sample is the quasi-linear relation between the gamma-ray luminosity and the star formation rate, obtained assuming that the latter is well traced by the infra-red luminosity of the galaxies. The non-linearity of this relation has not been fully explained yet. Aims. We aim at determining the biases derived from the use of the infrared luminosity as a proxy for the star formation rate, and shed light onto the more fundamental relation between the latter and the gamma-ray luminosity. We expect to quantify and explain some trends observed in this relation. Methods. We compile from the literature a near-homogeneous set of distances, ultraviolet, optical, infra-red, and gamma-ray fluxes for all known gamma-ray emitting star-forming…
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