A spatially resolved radio spectral study of the galaxy M 51
L. Gajovi\'c, B. Adebahr, A. Basu, V. Heesen, M. Br\"uggen, F. de, Gasperin, M.A. Lara-Lopez, J.B.R. Oonk, H.W. Edler, D.J. Bomans, R. Paladino,, L.E. Gardu\~no, O. L\'opez-Cruz, M. Stein, J. Fritz, J. Piotrowska, A. Sinha

TL;DR
This study investigates the causes of low-frequency spectral flattening in the radio emission of galaxy M 51, revealing that cosmic-ray ionisation losses and free-free absorption contribute to this phenomenon, impacting star formation measurements.
Contribution
It provides the first spatially resolved analysis of low-frequency radio spectra in M 51, combining multi-frequency data and modeling to identify the causes of spectral flattening.
Findings
Low-frequency spectrum is very flat or inverted in spiral arms.
Spectral flattening is caused by ionisation losses and free-free absorption.
No correlation between emission measure from radio and Hα observations.
Abstract
Radio continuum emission from galaxies at gigahertz frequencies can be used as an extinction-free tracer of star formation. However, at frequencies of a few hundred megahertz, there is evidence for low-frequency spectral flattening. We wish to better understand the origin of this low-frequency flattening and, to this end, perform a spatially resolved study of the nearby spiral galaxy M 51. We explore the different effects that can cause flattening of the spectrum towards lower frequencies, such as free-free absorption and cosmic-ray ionisation losses. We used radio continuum intensity maps between 54 and 8350 MHz at eight different frequencies, with observations at 240 MHz from the Giant Metrewave Radio Telescope presented for the first time. We corrected for contribution from thermal free-free emission using an H map that has been extinction-corrected with 24 m data. We…
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