Star Formation Rates and Extinction Properties of IR-luminous Galaxies in the Spitzer First Look Survey
We investigate the instantaneous star formation rates (SFRs) and extinction properties for a large (N = 274), near-infrared (NIR: 2.2 km) + mid-infrared (MIR: 24 km)-selected sample of normal to ultraluminous infrared galaxies (ULIRGs; 10 super(9) < L sub(IR)/L sub( )< 10 super(12.5)) with <...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The Astrophysical journal 2006-01, Vol.637 (1), p.227-241 |
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creator | Choi, P. I Yan, L Im, M Helou, G Soifer, B. T Storrie-Lombardi, L. J Chary, R Teplitz, H. I Fadda, D Marleau, F. R Lacy, M Wilson, G Appleton, P. N Frayer, D. T Surace, J. A |
description | We investigate the instantaneous star formation rates (SFRs) and extinction properties for a large (N = 274), near-infrared (NIR: 2.2 km) + mid-infrared (MIR: 24 km)-selected sample of normal to ultraluminous infrared galaxies (ULIRGs; 10 super(9) < L sub(IR)/L sub( )< 10 super(12.5)) with < z > 6 0.8 in the Spitzer Extragalactic First Look Survey (FLS). We combine 24 km observations with high-resolution Keck DEIMOS spectroscopy to derive optical emission-line (Ha, Hb, and [O II]) and infrared star formation rates (SFR sub(opt) and SFR sub(IR), respectively). Comparison of SFR diagnostics reveals a wide extinction range (1.0 < A sub(V) < 4.0 mag) for this sample, even after removing spectroscopic and IRAC color-selected AGN candidates (- 12% of the sample). Objects with SFRs of a few M sub( )yr super(-1) have extinction values consistent with normal spirals (A sub(V) - 1.O mag). By contrast, LIRGs at z 1, which comprise a fraction of our sample, have SFR - 100 M sub( )yr super(-1) and a mean A sub(V) - 2.5 mag. This translates to a 97% mean [O II] ll3727 attentuation and in extreme cases is as high as 99.7%. We derive an IR-luminosity-dependent A super(I) sub(v) super(R) function [A super(I) sub(v) super(R) = 0.75 log(L sub(IR)/L sub( )) - 6.35 mag] that we use to extinction correct our line luminosities. The resulting correlation between SFR sub(IR) and SFR sub(opt) has a dispersion of 60.2 dex (semi-interquartile range). Comparison of the A sub(V) dependence on redshift and L sub(IR) reveals that for a fixed L sub(IR), there is no significant A sub(V)evolution. Comparison to previous studies reveals a mean attenuation that is intermediate between that of local optical/UV- and radio-selected samples with a marginally stronger L sub(IR) dependence. |
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I ; Yan, L ; Im, M ; Helou, G ; Soifer, B. T ; Storrie-Lombardi, L. J ; Chary, R ; Teplitz, H. I ; Fadda, D ; Marleau, F. R ; Lacy, M ; Wilson, G ; Appleton, P. N ; Frayer, D. T ; Surace, J. A</creator><creatorcontrib>Choi, P. I ; Yan, L ; Im, M ; Helou, G ; Soifer, B. T ; Storrie-Lombardi, L. J ; Chary, R ; Teplitz, H. I ; Fadda, D ; Marleau, F. R ; Lacy, M ; Wilson, G ; Appleton, P. N ; Frayer, D. T ; Surace, J. A</creatorcontrib><description>We investigate the instantaneous star formation rates (SFRs) and extinction properties for a large (N = 274), near-infrared (NIR: 2.2 km) + mid-infrared (MIR: 24 km)-selected sample of normal to ultraluminous infrared galaxies (ULIRGs; 10 super(9) < L sub(IR)/L sub( )< 10 super(12.5)) with < z > 6 0.8 in the Spitzer Extragalactic First Look Survey (FLS). We combine 24 km observations with high-resolution Keck DEIMOS spectroscopy to derive optical emission-line (Ha, Hb, and [O II]) and infrared star formation rates (SFR sub(opt) and SFR sub(IR), respectively). Comparison of SFR diagnostics reveals a wide extinction range (1.0 < A sub(V) < 4.0 mag) for this sample, even after removing spectroscopic and IRAC color-selected AGN candidates (- 12% of the sample). Objects with SFRs of a few M sub( )yr super(-1) have extinction values consistent with normal spirals (A sub(V) - 1.O mag). By contrast, LIRGs at z 1, which comprise a fraction of our sample, have SFR - 100 M sub( )yr super(-1) and a mean A sub(V) - 2.5 mag. This translates to a 97% mean [O II] ll3727 attentuation and in extreme cases is as high as 99.7%. We derive an IR-luminosity-dependent A super(I) sub(v) super(R) function [A super(I) sub(v) super(R) = 0.75 log(L sub(IR)/L sub( )) - 6.35 mag] that we use to extinction correct our line luminosities. The resulting correlation between SFR sub(IR) and SFR sub(opt) has a dispersion of 60.2 dex (semi-interquartile range). Comparison of the A sub(V) dependence on redshift and L sub(IR) reveals that for a fixed L sub(IR), there is no significant A sub(V)evolution. 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A</creatorcontrib><title>Star Formation Rates and Extinction Properties of IR-luminous Galaxies in the Spitzer First Look Survey</title><title>The Astrophysical journal</title><description>We investigate the instantaneous star formation rates (SFRs) and extinction properties for a large (N = 274), near-infrared (NIR: 2.2 km) + mid-infrared (MIR: 24 km)-selected sample of normal to ultraluminous infrared galaxies (ULIRGs; 10 super(9) < L sub(IR)/L sub( )< 10 super(12.5)) with < z > 6 0.8 in the Spitzer Extragalactic First Look Survey (FLS). We combine 24 km observations with high-resolution Keck DEIMOS spectroscopy to derive optical emission-line (Ha, Hb, and [O II]) and infrared star formation rates (SFR sub(opt) and SFR sub(IR), respectively). Comparison of SFR diagnostics reveals a wide extinction range (1.0 < A sub(V) < 4.0 mag) for this sample, even after removing spectroscopic and IRAC color-selected AGN candidates (- 12% of the sample). Objects with SFRs of a few M sub( )yr super(-1) have extinction values consistent with normal spirals (A sub(V) - 1.O mag). By contrast, LIRGs at z 1, which comprise a fraction of our sample, have SFR - 100 M sub( )yr super(-1) and a mean A sub(V) - 2.5 mag. This translates to a 97% mean [O II] ll3727 attentuation and in extreme cases is as high as 99.7%. We derive an IR-luminosity-dependent A super(I) sub(v) super(R) function [A super(I) sub(v) super(R) = 0.75 log(L sub(IR)/L sub( )) - 6.35 mag] that we use to extinction correct our line luminosities. The resulting correlation between SFR sub(IR) and SFR sub(opt) has a dispersion of 60.2 dex (semi-interquartile range). Comparison of the A sub(V) dependence on redshift and L sub(IR) reveals that for a fixed L sub(IR), there is no significant A sub(V)evolution. 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R</creatorcontrib><creatorcontrib>Lacy, M</creatorcontrib><creatorcontrib>Wilson, G</creatorcontrib><creatorcontrib>Appleton, P. N</creatorcontrib><creatorcontrib>Frayer, D. T</creatorcontrib><creatorcontrib>Surace, J. A</creatorcontrib><collection>Pascal-Francis</collection><collection>CrossRef</collection><collection>Meteorological & Geoastrophysical Abstracts</collection><collection>Meteorological & Geoastrophysical Abstracts - Academic</collection><collection>Technology Research Database</collection><collection>Aerospace Database</collection><collection>Advanced Technologies Database with Aerospace</collection><jtitle>The Astrophysical journal</jtitle></facets><delivery><delcategory>Remote Search Resource</delcategory><fulltext>fulltext_linktorsrc</fulltext></delivery><addata><au>Choi, P. I</au><au>Yan, L</au><au>Im, M</au><au>Helou, G</au><au>Soifer, B. T</au><au>Storrie-Lombardi, L. J</au><au>Chary, R</au><au>Teplitz, H. I</au><au>Fadda, D</au><au>Marleau, F. R</au><au>Lacy, M</au><au>Wilson, G</au><au>Appleton, P. N</au><au>Frayer, D. T</au><au>Surace, J. A</au><format>journal</format><genre>article</genre><ristype>JOUR</ristype><atitle>Star Formation Rates and Extinction Properties of IR-luminous Galaxies in the Spitzer First Look Survey</atitle><jtitle>The Astrophysical journal</jtitle><date>2006-01-20</date><risdate>2006</risdate><volume>637</volume><issue>1</issue><spage>227</spage><epage>241</epage><pages>227-241</pages><issn>0004-637X</issn><eissn>1538-4357</eissn><coden>ASJOAB</coden><abstract>We investigate the instantaneous star formation rates (SFRs) and extinction properties for a large (N = 274), near-infrared (NIR: 2.2 km) + mid-infrared (MIR: 24 km)-selected sample of normal to ultraluminous infrared galaxies (ULIRGs; 10 super(9) < L sub(IR)/L sub( )< 10 super(12.5)) with < z > 6 0.8 in the Spitzer Extragalactic First Look Survey (FLS). We combine 24 km observations with high-resolution Keck DEIMOS spectroscopy to derive optical emission-line (Ha, Hb, and [O II]) and infrared star formation rates (SFR sub(opt) and SFR sub(IR), respectively). Comparison of SFR diagnostics reveals a wide extinction range (1.0 < A sub(V) < 4.0 mag) for this sample, even after removing spectroscopic and IRAC color-selected AGN candidates (- 12% of the sample). Objects with SFRs of a few M sub( )yr super(-1) have extinction values consistent with normal spirals (A sub(V) - 1.O mag). By contrast, LIRGs at z 1, which comprise a fraction of our sample, have SFR - 100 M sub( )yr super(-1) and a mean A sub(V) - 2.5 mag. This translates to a 97% mean [O II] ll3727 attentuation and in extreme cases is as high as 99.7%. We derive an IR-luminosity-dependent A super(I) sub(v) super(R) function [A super(I) sub(v) super(R) = 0.75 log(L sub(IR)/L sub( )) - 6.35 mag] that we use to extinction correct our line luminosities. The resulting correlation between SFR sub(IR) and SFR sub(opt) has a dispersion of 60.2 dex (semi-interquartile range). Comparison of the A sub(V) dependence on redshift and L sub(IR) reveals that for a fixed L sub(IR), there is no significant A sub(V)evolution. Comparison to previous studies reveals a mean attenuation that is intermediate between that of local optical/UV- and radio-selected samples with a marginally stronger L sub(IR) dependence.</abstract><cop>Chicago, IL</cop><pub>IOP Publishing</pub><doi>10.1086/498388</doi><tpages>15</tpages></addata></record> |
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title | Star Formation Rates and Extinction Properties of IR-luminous Galaxies in the Spitzer First Look Survey |
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