We examine the connection between diffuse ionized gas (DIG), H II regions, and field O and B stars in the nearby spiral M101 and its dwarf companion NGC 5474 using ultra-deep H α narrow-band imaging and archival GALEX UV imaging. We find a strong correlation between DIG H α surface brightness and the incident ionizing flux leaked from the nearby H II regions, which we reproduce well using simple CLOUDY simulations. While we also find a strong correlation between H α and co-spatial far-ultraviolet (FUV) surface brightness in DIG, the extinction-corrected integrated UV colours in these regions imply stellar populations too old to produce the necessary ionizing photon flux. Combined, this suggests that H II region leakage, not field OB stars, is the primary source of DIG in the M101 Group. Corroborating this interpretation, we find systematic disagreement between the H α- and FUV-derived star formation rates (SFRs) in the DIG, with SFRH α
CITATION STYLE
Watkins, A. E., Mihos, J. C., Harding, P., & Garner, R. (2024). Implications on star formation rate indicators from H II regions and diffuse ionized gas in the M101 Group. Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 530(4), 4560–4577. https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stae1153
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