4.7 Article

THE IMPORTANCE OF NEBULAR CONTINUUM AND LINE EMISSION IN OBSERVATIONS OF YOUNG MASSIVE STAR CLUSTERS

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 708, Issue 1, Pages 26-37

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1088/0004-637X/708/1/26

Keywords

galaxies: individual (NGC 4449); galaxies: starburst; galaxies: star clusters; H II regions; ISM: lines and bands

Funding

  1. NASA Earth and Space Science Fellowship
  2. Virginia Space Grant Consortium
  3. University of Virginia through a Governor's Fellowship
  4. NSF through CAREER [0548103]
  5. David and Lucile Packard Foundation
  6. Space Telescope Science Institute [AR09934]
  7. Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy, Inc., under NASA [NAS 5-26555]

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In this spectroscopic study of infant massive star clusters, we find that continuum emission from ionized gas rivals the stellar luminosity at optical wavelengths. In addition, we find that nebular line emission is significant in many commonly used broadband Hubble Space Telescope (HST) filters including the F814W I-band, the F555W V-band, and the F435W B-band. Two young massive clusters (YMCs) in the nearby starburst galaxy NGC4449 were targeted for follow-up spectroscopic observations after Reines et al. discovered an F814W I-band excess in their photometric study of radio-detected clusters in the galaxy. The spectra were obtained with the Dual Imaging Spectrograph (DIS) on the 3.5 m Apache Point Observatory (APO) telescope and have a spectral range of similar to 3800-9800 angstrom. We supplement these data with HST and Sloan Digital Sky Survey photometry of the clusters. By comparing our data to the Starburst99 and GALEV evolutionary synthesis models, we find that nebular continuum emission competes with the stellar light in our observations and that the relative contribution from the nebular continuum is largest in the U-and I-bands, where the Balmer (3646 angstrom) and Paschen jumps (8207 angstrom) are located. The spectra also exhibit strong line emission including the [S III] lambda lambda 9069, 9532 lines in the HST F814W I-band. We find that the combination of nebular continuum and line emission can account for the F814W I-band excess previously found by Reines et al. In an effort to provide a benchmark for estimating the impact of ionized gas emission on photometric observations of young massive stellar populations, we compute the relative contributions of the stellar continuum, nebular continuum, and emission lines to the total observed flux of a 3 Myr old cluster through various HST filter/instrument combinations, including filters in the Wide Field Camera 3. We urge caution when comparing observations of YMCs to evolutionary synthesis models since nebular continuum and line emission can have a large impact on magnitudes and colors of young (less than or similar to 5 Myr) clusters, significantly affecting inferred properties such as ages, masses and extinctions.

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