A Comparative Study of Mid-Infrared Star-Formation Rate Tracers and Their Metallicity Dependence
C. M. Whitcomb, K. Sandstrom, E. J. Murphy, and S. Linden

TL;DR
This study compares mid-infrared star-formation rate tracers, highlighting their metallicity dependence and proposing calibrated combinations of neon lines and PAH features that minimize this dependence for more accurate SFR measurements.
Contribution
It introduces new calibrations combining neon emission lines and PAH features that reduce metallicity bias in mid-IR SFR tracers, improving measurement accuracy.
Findings
PAH emission alone is a poor SFR tracer due to metallicity dependence.
Calibrations combining [Ne II], [Ne III], and PAH features minimize metallicity effects.
Mid-IR SFR tracers are effective up to redshift z~1 with JWST.
Abstract
We present a comparative study of a set of star-formation rate tracers based on mid-infrared emission in the 12.81m [Ne II] line, the 15.56m [Ne III] line, and emission features from polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) between 5.2 and 14.7m. We calibrate our tracers with the thermal component of the radio continuum emission at 33 GHz from 33 extranuclear star-forming regions observed in nearby galaxies. Correlations between mid-IR emission features and thermal 33 GHz star-formation rates (SFR) show significant metallicity-dependent scatter and offsets. We find similar metallicity-dependent trends in commonly used SFR tracers such as H and 24m. As seen in previous studies, PAH emission alone is a poor SFR tracer due to a strong metallicity dependence: lower metallicity regions show decreased PAH emission relative to their SFR compared to higher metallicity…
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