Fourier transform power spectra of azimuthal scans of the optical structure
of M33 are evaluated for B, V, and R passbands and fit to fractal models of
continuum emission with superposed star formation. Power spectra are also
determined for Halpha. The best models have intrinsic power spectra with 1D
slopes of around -0.7pm0.7, significantly shallower than the Kolmogorov
spectrum (slope =-1.7) but steeper than pure noise (slope=0). A fit to the
power spectrum of the flocculent galaxy NGC 5055 gives a steeper slope of
around -1.5pm0.2, which could be from turbulence. Both cases model the optical
light as a superposition of continuous and point-like stellar sources that
follow an underlying fractal pattern. Foreground bright stars are clipped in
the images, but they are so prominent in M33 that even their residual affects
the power spectrum, making it shallower than what is intrinsic to the galaxy. A
model consisting of random foreground stars added to the best model of NGC 5055
fits the observed power spectrum of M33 as well as the shallower intrinsic
power spectrum that was made without foreground stars. Thus the optical
structure in M33 could result from turbulence too.Comment: accepted by ApJ, 13 pages, 10 figure