Comparing Infrared Star-Formation Rate Indicators with Optically-Derived Quantities
Abstract
We examine the UV reprocessing efficiencies of warm dust and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) through an analysis of the mid- and far-infrared surface luminosity densities of 85 nearby H-selected star-forming galaxies detected by the volume-limited KPNO International Spectroscopic Survey (KISS). Because H selection is not biased toward continuum-bright objects, the KISS sample spans a wide range in stellar masses (-), as well as H luminosity (-), mid-infrared 8.0m luminosity (-), and [Bw-R] color (-.1-2.2). We find that mid-infrared polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH) emission in the Spitzer IRAC 8.0m band correlates with star formation, and that the efficiency with which galaxies reprocess UV energy into PAH emission depends on metallicity. We also find that the relationship between far-infrared luminosity in the Spitzer MIPS 24m band pass and H-measured star-formation rate varies from galaxy to galaxy within our sample; we do not observe a metallicity dependence in this relationship. We use optical colors and established mass-to-light relationships to determine stellar masses for the KISS galaxies; we compare these masses to those of nearby galaxies as a confirmation that the volume-limited nature of KISS avoids strong biases. We also examine the relationship between IRAC 3.6m luminosity and galaxy stellar mass, and find a color-dependent correlation between the two.
Cite
@article{arxiv.1407.1587,
title = {Comparing Infrared Star-Formation Rate Indicators with Optically-Derived Quantities},
author = {Jason E. Young and Caryl Gronwall and John J. Salzer and Jessica L. Rosenberg},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1407.1587},
year = {2015}
}
Comments
15 pages, 10 figures