High Mass, OB Star Formation in M51 : HST Halpha and Palpha Imaging
N. Z. Scoville (California Institute of Technology),M. Polletta, (California Institute of Technology, Observatory of Geneva), S. Ewald, S., R. Stolovy (California Institute of Technology), R. Thompson, M. Rieke, (Steward Observatory, University of Arizona)

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution HST imaging to catalog and analyze high-mass star-forming regions in M51, revealing their luminosity distribution, clustering, and extinction properties with unprecedented detail.
Contribution
It provides a detailed catalog of 1373 Halpha emission regions in M51, with new insights into their luminosity function, size, and clustering at high spatial resolution.
Findings
Luminosity function follows a power law with index -1.01
Regions are strongly clustered on scales <= 96 pc
Maximum intrinsic luminosity exceeds 10^{40} erg s^{-1}
Abstract
(first paragraph) We have obtained Halpha and Palpha emission line images covering the central 3 - 4 arcmin of M51 using the WFPC2 and NICMOS cameras on HST to study the high-mass stellar population. The 0.1 - 0.2 arcsec pixels provide 4.6 - 9 pc resolution in M51 and the Halpha/Palpha line ratios are used to obtain extinction estimates. A sample of 1373 Halpha emission regions is catalogued using an automated and uniform measurement algorithm. Their sizes are typically 10 - 100 pc. The luminosity function for the Halpha emission regions is obtained over the range L_{Halpha} = 10^{36} to 2 times 10^{39} erg s{-1}. The luminosity function is fit well by a power law with dN/dlnL proportional to L^{-1.01}). The power law is significantly truncated and no regions were found with observed L_{Halpha} above 2 times 10^{39} erg s^{-1} (uncorrected for extinction; the maximum seen in…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
