SIMBAD references

2004A&A...415..509V - Astronomy and Astrophysics, volume 415, 509-520 (2004/2-4)

Dust and super star clusters in NGC 5253.

VANZI L. and SAUVAGE M.

Abstract (from CDS):

We present new observations of the famous starburst galaxy NGC 5253 which owes its celebrity to possibly being the youngest and closest starburst galaxy known. Our observations in the infrared and millimeter contribute to shed light on the properties of this interesting object. We have used our new data along with data from the literature to study the properties of the young stellar clusters present in NGC 5253. We find that the brightest optical clusters are all characterized by a near-infrared excess that is explained by the combined effect of extinction and emission by dust. For the brightest infrared cluster we model the spectral energy distribution from the optical to the radio. We find that this cluster dominates the galaxy emission longward of 3µm, that it has a bolometric luminosity of 1.2x109L and a mass of 1.2x106M, giving L/M≃103. The cluster is obscured by 7mag of optical extinction produced by about 1.5x105M of dust. The dust properties are peculiar with respect to the dust properties in the solar neighbourhood with a composition characterized by a lack of silicates and a flatter size distribution than the standard one, i.e. a bias toward larger grains. We find that NGC 5253 is a striking example of a galaxy where the infrared-submillimeter and ultraviolet-optical emissions originate in totally decoupled regions of vastly different physical sizes.

Abstract Copyright:

Journal keyword(s): galaxies: starburst - dust, extinction - infrared - super-star clusters - galaxies: individual: NGC 5253

Nomenclature: Fig.1, Table 1: [CMB97] NGC 5253-NNa (No. 5a) added.

Simbad objects: 10

goto Full paper

goto View the references in ADS

To bookmark this query, right click on this link: simbad:2004A&A...415..509V and select 'bookmark this link' or equivalent in the popup menu