Abstract

We present a comparison of the Milky Way’s star formation rate (SFR) surface density (∑SFR) obtained with two independent state-of-the-art observational methods. The first method infers ΣSFR from observations of the dust thermal emission from interstellar dust grains in far-infrared wavelengths registered in the Herschel infrared Galactic Plane Survey (Hi-GAL). The second method determines ΣSFR by modeling the current population of O-, B-, and A-type stars in a 6 kpc × 6 kpc area around the Sun. We find an agreement between the two methods within a factor of two for the mean SFRs and the SFR surface density profiles. Given the broad differences between the observational techniques and the independent assumptions in the methods for computing the SFRs, this agreement constitutes a significant advance in our understanding of the star formation of our Galaxy and implies that the local SFR has been roughly constant over the past 10 Myr.

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