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A study of star formation is carried out on 35 giant extragalactic HII regions (GEHRs) in seven galaxies using optical photometric data in BVR broad bands and in the emission line of H alpha. Interstellar extinction, metallicity and nebular contributions to the broad bands are estimated using spectroscopic data on these objects. Dimensionless diagrams involving B-V and V-R colors and the flux ratio of Balmer line to B band continuum are used to study star formation. The cluster colors indicate reduced extinction towards stellar continuum compared to the values derived from Balmer lines for the ionized gas. The frequency of detection of classical young (t < 3 Myr) regions with only one burst of star formation is found to be low as compared to young regions with an accompanying population rich in red supergiants from a previous burst (t ~ 10 Myr). Reduced extinction towards cluster stars, destruction of ionizing photons and the existence of older population, often spatially unresolvable from the younger population, all conspire to make the observed Balmer line equivalent widths low in a majority of the GEHRs. A scenario of star formation is suggested which explains many of the observed properties of GEHRs, including the core-halo structure, reduced extinction for the radiation from stars as compared to that from the nebular gas, non-detection of young single burst regions and the co-existence of two populations of different ages.
We report on the detection of optically thick free-free radio sources in the galaxies M33, NGC 253, and NGC 6946 using data in the literature. We interpret these sources as being young, embedded star birth regions, which are likely to be clusters of
We report the first results of a long term program aiming to provide accurate independent estimates of the Hubble constant (H0) using the L-sigma distance estimator for Giant extragalactic HII regions (GEHR) and HII galaxies. We have used VLT and S
(Abridged) We have obtained HST WFPC2 observations of three very luminous but morphologically different giant HII regions (GHRs) in M101, NGC5461, NGC5462, and NGC5471, in order to study cluster formation in GHRs. The measured (M_F547M - M_F675W) col
We present a multiwavelength (ultraviolet, infrared, optical and CO) study of a set of luminous HII regions in M33: NGC 604, NGC 595, NGC 592, NGC 588 and IC131. We study the emission distribution in the interiors of the HII regions to investigate th
Cosmological applications of HII galaxies (HIIGx) and giant extragalactic HII regions (GEHR) to construct the Hubble diagram at higher redshifts require knowledge of the $L$--$sigma$ relation of the standard candles used. In this paper, we study the