We present observations of the spiral galaxy M33 with Spitzer at 24, 70, and 160 µm. The excellent resolution and mapping capabilities of Spitzer combined with the proximity of M33 result in observations that enable a detailed study of the distribution of star formation (SF) and dust in the galaxy. We compare the morphology of M33 at far-infrared wavelengths with other standard SF indicators such as H-alpha and radio continuum using a Fourier filtering technique to separate the diffuse emission components from compact sources. We find that the infrared emission at 24 and 70 µm follows closely the structure of the ionized gas, indicating that it is heated largely by hot, ionizing stars. At 160 µm a diffuse cold dust component matches only approximately the structure of the old red stellar population or the distribution of blue light. It is, however, very similar to the structure of the diffuse nonthermal radio emission.
ADS Citation Query
# citations = 36
average # citations/year = 5.14
(# years = 7)
# citations vs. year [year=citations]
[2010=4]
[2009=4]
[2008=3]
[2007=9]
[2006=9]
[2005=5]
[2004=2]
[determined from ADS on 10 Sep 2010]
Copyright © 2001-2006
Karl D. Gordon
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