The local star formation rate and radio luminosity density
Abstract
We present a new determination of the local volume-averaged star formation rate from the 1.4 GHz luminosity function of star forming galaxies. Our sample, taken from the B<=12 Revised Shapley-Ames catalogue (231 normal spiral galaxies over effective area 7.1 sr) has ~100% complete radio detections and is insensitive to dust obscuration and cirrus contamination. After removal of known active galaxies, the best-fit Schechter function has a faint-end slope of -1.27+/-0.07 in agreement with the local Halpha luminosity function, characteristic luminosity L*=(2.6+/-0.7)*1022 W/Hz and density phi* = (4.8 +/-1.1)*10-4 / Mpc3. The inferred local radio luminosity density of (1.73+/-0.37+/-0.03)*1019 W/Hz/Mpc3 (Poisson noise, large scale structure fluctuations) implies a volume averaged star formation rate ~2 x larger than the Gallego et al. Halpha estimate, i.e. rho(1.4 GHz = (2.10+/-0.45+/-0.04) *10-2$ Msun/yr/Mpc3 for a Salpeter initial mass function from 0.1-125 Msun and Hubble constant of 50 km/s/Mpc. We demonstrate that the Balmer decrement is a highly unreliable extinction estimator, and argue that optical-UV SFRs are easily underestimated, particularly at high redshift.
Turn this paper into a full lesson
ArcXiv compiles a staged curriculum from this paper: 8-12 lessons across beginner → advanced, synthesised section guides, visuals, flashcards, a quiz, exercises, and on-demand deep dives per section. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.