A Cosmic Relation between Extinction and Star Formation
Mon.Not.Roy.Astron.Soc.Lett.368:L47-L51,2006 We study the relation between the star formation intensity of galaxies and the extinction by dust of their emitted light. We employ a detailed statistical analysis of Hubble Deep Field North data to show a clear positive correlation between the extinction...
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Zusammenfassung: | Mon.Not.Roy.Astron.Soc.Lett.368:L47-L51,2006 We study the relation between the star formation intensity of galaxies and
the extinction by dust of their emitted light. We employ a detailed statistical
analysis of Hubble Deep Field North data to show a clear positive correlation
between the extinction and star formation intensity at all epochs from redshift
0.4 to 6.5. The extinction evidently increases with time for a given star
formation intensity, consistent with the expected increase in the metallicity
with time. Our observational results are well fitted at all epochs by a double
power-law model with a fixed shape that simply shifts with redshift. The
correlation between the extinction and the star formation intensity can be
interpreted by combining two other trends: the correlation between the star
formation rate and the gas content of galaxies, and the evolution of the
dust-to-gas ratio in galaxies. If we assume that Kennicutt's observed relation
for the former is valid at each redshift, then our findings imply an
interesting variation in the dust-to-gas ratio in galaxies within each epoch
and with time, and suggest new ways to investigate the cosmic evolution of this
quantity. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.astro-ph/0509476 |