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We combine Hubble Space Telescope (HST) Paschen $beta$ (Pa$beta$) imaging with ground-based, previously published H$alpha$ maps to estimate the attenuation affecting H$alpha$, A(H$alpha$), across the nearby, face-on galaxies NGC 5194 and NGC 6946. We estimate A(H$alpha$) in ~ 2,000 independent 2 ~75 pc diameter apertures in each galaxy, spanning out to a galactocentric radius of almost 10 kpc. In both galaxies, A(H$alpha$) drops with radius, with a bright, high attenuation inner region, though in detail the profiles differ between the two galaxies. Regions with the highest attenuation-corrected H$alpha$ luminosity show the highest attenuation, but the observed H$alpha$ luminosity of a region is not a good predictor of attenuation in our data. Consistent with much previous work, the IR-to-H$alpha$ color does a good job of predicting A(H$alpha$). We calculate the best-fit empirical coefficients for use combining H$alpha$ with 8, 12, 24, 70, or 100 $mu$m to correct for attenuation. These agree well with previous work but we also measure significant scatter around each of these linear relations. The local atomic plus molecular gas column density, N(H), also predicts A(H$alpha$) well. We show that a screen with magnitude ~ 0.2 times the expected for a Milky Way gas-to-dust value does a reasonable job of explaining A(H$alpha$) as a function of N(H). This could be expected if only ~ 40% of gas and dust directly overlap regions of H$alpha$ emission.
Star formation induced by a spiral shock wave, which in turn is generated by a spiral density wave, produces an azimuthal age gradient across the spiral arm, which has opposite signs on either side of the corotational resonance. An analysis of the sp
Observations of ongoing HI accretion in nearby galaxies have only identified about 10% of the needed fuel to sustain star formation in these galaxies. Most of these observations have been conducted using interferometers and may have missed lower colu
We present a far-UV (FUV) study of the star-forming complexes (SFCs) in three nearby galaxies using the Ultraviolet Imaging Telescope (UVIT). The galaxies are close to face-on and show significant outer disk star formation. Two of them are isolated (
The mass-to-light ratio (M/L) is a key parameter in decomposing galactic rotation curves into contributions from the baryonic components and the dark halo of a galaxy. One direct observational method to determine the disc M/L is by calculating the su
We characterize the dust in NGC628 and NGC6946, two nearby spiral galaxies in the KINGFISH sample. With data from 3.6um to 500um, dust models are strongly constrained. Using the Draine & Li (2007) dust model, (amorphous silicate and carbonaceous grai