A multi-wavelength study of Galactic H II regions with extended emission
Jyotirmoy Dey, Jagadheep D. Pandian, Dharam V. Lal, Michael R. Rugel,, Andreas Brunthaler, Karl M. Menten, Friedrich Wyrowski, Nirupam Roy, Sergio, A. Dzib, Sac-Nict\'e X. Medina, Sarwar Khan, Rohit Dokara

TL;DR
This study investigates the role of extended emission in H II regions to resolve the discrepancy between radio and infrared estimates of ionizing photon rates, using multi-wavelength observations of eight Galactic regions.
Contribution
It demonstrates that including extended emission in radio observations aligns ionizing photon rate estimates from radio and infrared data, clarifying previous discrepancies.
Findings
Extended emission accounts for 5-28% of ionizing photons.
Radio and infrared estimates agree when extended emission is considered.
Multiple candidate ionizing stars are identified in each region.
Abstract
H II regions are the signposts of massive () star-forming sites in our Galaxy. It has been observed that the ionizing photon rate inferred from the radio continuum emission of H II regions is significantly lower ( 90%) than that inferred from far-infrared fluxes measured by IRAS. This discrepancy in the ionizing photon rates may arise due to there being significant amounts of dust within the H II regions or the presence of extended emission that is undetected by high-resolution radio interferometric observations. Here, we study a sample of eight compact and ultracompact H II regions with extended emission to explore its role in resolving the discrepancy. We have used observations at the uGMRT (1.25-1.45 GHz) and data from the GLOSTAR survey (4-8 GHz) to estimate the ionizing photon rate from the radio continuum emission. We have also estimated the ionizing…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Spectroscopy and Laser Applications
