Study of the thermal and nonthermal emission components in M31: the Sardinia Radio Telescope view at 6.6 GHz
S. Fatigoni, F. Radiconi, E.S. Battistelli, M. Murgia, E. Carretti, P., Castangia, R. Concu, P. de Bernardis, J. Fritz, R. Genova-Santos, F. Govoni,, F. Guidi, L. Lamagna, S. Masi, A. Melis, R. Paladini, F.M. Perez-Toledo, F., Piacentini, S. Poppi, R. Rebolo, J.A. Rubino-Martin

TL;DR
This study used the Sardinia Radio Telescope at 6.6 GHz to analyze M31's radio emission, separating thermal and nonthermal components, and estimating its star formation rate with high-resolution data.
Contribution
First high-sensitivity, high-resolution 6.6 GHz observations of M31 enabling detailed thermal/nonthermal emission separation and star formation rate mapping.
Findings
Thermal emission traces HII regions around the ring.
Nonthermal emission is smoother due to cosmic ray diffusion.
Star formation rate estimated at 0.19 solar masses per year.
Abstract
The Andromeda galaxy is the best-known large galaxy besides our own Milky Way. Several images and studies exist at all wavelengths from radio to hard X-ray. Nevertheless, only a few observations are available in the microwave range where its average radio emission reaches the minimum. In this paper, we want to study the radio morphology of the galaxy, decouple thermal from nonthermal emission, and extract the star formation rate. We also aim to derive a complete catalog of radio sources for the mapped patch of sky. We observed the Andromeda galaxy with the Sardinia Radio Telescope at 6.6 GHz with very high sensitivity and angular resolution, and an unprecedented sky coverage. Using new 6.6 GHz data and Effelsberg radio telescope ancillary data, we confirm that, globally, the spectral index is , while in the star forming regions it decreases to . By disentangling…
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