Bibcode
DOI
Muñoz-Tuñon, C.; Fuentes-Masip, O.; Castaneda, H. O.
Referencia bibliográfica
Publications Astronomical Society of Australia, vol. 15, no. 1, p. 103-5
Fecha de publicación:
4
1998
Número de citas
3
Número de citas referidas
2
Descripción
It is now well established that there is a diffuse ionized medium which
extends far beyond the discs of spirals. The mechanism responsible for
the ionization is still an issue of debate, and the method of measuring
the total luminosity, independently of the observational set-up, has to
be defined. Here we analyse the case of the Magellanic irregular NGC
4449, using Fabry-Perot bidimensional mapping of the H-alpha emission
line, at the 4.2 m WHT telescope on La Palma, Canary Islands. The total
spatial coverage of 80 x 80 sq. arcsec allows most of the star forming
regions to be sampled at 0.26 arcsec/pixel spatial resolution. Using 3D
spectroscopy, it is possible to define the individual star-forming
regions and to produce a luminosity versus size diagram. This can be
used to estimate directly the number of photons leaking out from those
regions exceeding the thickness of the galactic disc. In the case of NGC
4449 it is shown that the large population of giant extragalactic HII
regions can be the source of UV photons ionizing the diffuse ionized gas
(DIG) of the galaxy, and the logL-R diagram can be used to quantify the
number of photons leaking out of the material surrounding the star
forming regions. In the case of NGC 4449 it is found that 54% of the
total luminosity of the giant star-forming regions is lost to the DIG.
This implies a contribution of 3.12 x 10^40^ erg/sec which amounts to
30% of the galaxy total H-alpha luminosity.