The Astrophysical Journal (Jan 2024)

JWST-FEAST: Feedback in Emerging extrAgalactic Star clusTers: Calibration of Star Formation Rates in the Mid-infrared with NGC 628

  • Daniela Calzetti,
  • Angela Adamo,
  • Sean T. Linden,
  • Benjamin Gregg,
  • Mark R. Krumholz,
  • Varun Bajaj,
  • Arjan Bik,
  • Michele Cignoni,
  • Matteo Correnti,
  • Bruce Elmegreen,
  • Helena Faustino Vieira,
  • John S. Gallagher,
  • Kathryn Grasha,
  • Robert A. Gutermuth,
  • Kelsey E. Johnson,
  • Matteo Messa,
  • Jens Melinder,
  • Göran Östlin,
  • Alex Pedrini,
  • Elena Sabbi,
  • Linda J. Smith,
  • Monica Tosi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/ad53c0
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 971, no. 1
p. 118

Abstract

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New JWST near-infrared imaging of the nearby galaxy NGC 628 from the JWST Cycle 1 program Feedback in Emerging extrAgalactic Star clusTers (JWST-FEAST) is combined with archival JWST mid-infrared imaging to calibrate the 21 μ m emission as a star formation rate (SFR) indicator at ∼120 pc scales. The Pa α (1.8756 μ m) hydrogen recombination emission line targeted by FEAST provides a reference SFR indicator that is relatively insensitive to dust attenuation, as demonstrated by combining this tracer with Hubble Space Telescope H α imaging. Our analysis is restricted to regions that appear compact in nebular line emission and are sufficiently bright to mitigate effects of both age and stochastic sampling of the stellar initial mass function. We find that the 21 μ m emission closely correlates with the nebular line emission, with a power law with exponent = 1.07 ± 0.01, in agreement with past results. We calibrate a hybrid SFR indicator using a combination of H α and 24 μ m (extrapolated from 21 μ m) tracers and derive the proportionality constant between the two tracers, b = 0.095 ± 0.007, which is ∼3–5 times larger than previous derivations using large regions/entire galaxies. We model these discrepancies as an increasing contribution to the dust heating by progressively older stellar populations for increasing spatial scale, in agreement with earlier findings that star formation is hierarchically distributed in galaxies. Thus, the use of hybrid SFR indicators requires prior knowledge of the mean age of the stellar populations dominating the dust heating, which makes their application uncertain. Conversely, nonlinear calibrations of SFRs from L (24) alone are more robust, with a factor ≲ 2.5 variation across the entire range of L (24) luminosities from H ii regions to galaxies.

Keywords