Extraplanar H II Regions in Spiral Galaxies. II. In Situ Star Formation in the Interstellar Thick Disk of NGC 4013

Abstract

We present observations of an Hα emitting knot in the thick disk of NGC 4013, demonstrating it is an H II region surrounding a cluster of young hot stars z = 860 pc above the plane of this edge-on spiral galaxy. With LBT/MODS spectroscopy we show this H II region has an Hα luminosity 4 - 7 times that of the Orion nebula, with an implied ionizing photon production rate Q0 49.4 (photons s-1). HST/WFPC2 imaging reveals an associated blue continuum source with MV = -8.210.24. Together these properties demonstrate the H II region is powered by a young cluster of stars formed in situ in the thick disk with an ionizing photon flux equivalent to 6 O7 V stars. If we assume ≈6 other extraplanar -emitting knots are H II regions, the total thick disk star formation rate of 4013 is 5 × 10-4 M yr-1. The star formation likely occurs in the dense clouds of the interstellar thick disk seen in optical images of dust extinction and CO emission.

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