Deviations from the Infrared-Radio Correlation in Massive, Ultra-compact Starburst Galaxies
Grayson C. Petter (Dartmouth College), Amanda A. Kepley, Ryan C., Hickox, Gregory H. Rudnick, Christy A. Tremonti, Aleksandar M., Diamond-Stanic, James E. Geach, Alison L. Coil, Paul H. Sell, John Moustakas,, David S. N. Rupke, Serena Perrotta, Kelly E. Whalen, Julie D. Davis

TL;DR
This study investigates why certain massive, ultra-compact starburst galaxies at intermediate redshift deviate from the typical infrared-radio correlation, using multi-wavelength observations to explore star formation and feedback processes.
Contribution
It provides new SFR estimates from radio and IR data for a sample of compact starburst galaxies and identifies deviations from the IR-radio correlation linked to their extreme properties.
Findings
IR SFRs are larger than radio SFRs in most galaxies
Deviations are most significant in the most compact, youngest systems
Possible causes include free-free absorption and hot dust emission
Abstract
Feedback through energetic outflows has emerged as a key physical process responsible for transforming star-forming galaxies into the quiescent systems observed in the local universe. To explore this process, this paper focuses on a sample of massive and compact merger remnant galaxies hosting high-velocity gaseous outflows ( km s), found at intermediate redshift (). From their mid-infrared emission and compact morphologies, these galaxies are estimated to have exceptionally large star formation rate (SFR) surface densities ( yr kpc), approaching the Eddington limit for radiation pressure on dust grains. This suggests that star formation feedback may be driving the observed outflows. However, these SFR estimates suffer from significant uncertainties. We therefore sought an independent…
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