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Ultraviolet, Optical, and Infrared Constraints on Models of Stellar Populations and Dust Attenuation

Authors :
Bruno Milliard
Alexander S. Szalay
Luciana Bianchi
Ted K. Wyder
Young-Wook Lee
David Schiminovich
D. Christopher Martin
Patrick Morrissey
Barry F. Madore
Mark Seibert
Timothy M. Heckman
Karl Forster
Susan G. Neff
Tom A. Barlow
Benjamin D. Johnson
R. Michael Rich
Todd Small
Jose Donas
Barry Y. Welsh
Marie Treyer
Sukyoung K. Yi
Peter G. Friedman
Beaussier, Catherine
Laboratoire d'Astrophysique de Marseille (LAM)
Aix Marseille Université (AMU)-Institut national des sciences de l'Univers (INSU - CNRS)-Centre National d'Études Spatiales [Toulouse] (CNES)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)
Publication Year :
2007
Publisher :
HAL CCSD, 2007.

Abstract

The color of galaxies is a fundamental property, easily measured, that constrains models of galaxies and their evolution. Dust attenuation and star formation history (SFH) are the dominant factors affecting the color of galaxies. Here we explore the empirical relation between SFH, attenuation, and color for a wide range of galaxies, including early types. These galaxies have been observed by GALEX, SDSS, and Spitzer, allowing the construction of measures of dust attenuation from the ratio of infrared (IR) to ultraviolet (UV) flux and measures of SFH from the strength of the 4000A break. The empirical relation between these three quantities is compared to models that separately predict the effects of dust and SFH on color. This comparison demonstrates the quantitative consistency of these simple models with the data and hints at the power of multiwavelength data for constraining these models. The UV color is a strong constraint; we find that a Milky Way extinction curve is disfavored, and that the UV emission of galaxies with large 4000A break strengths is likely to arise from evolved populations. We perform fits to the relation between SFH, attenuation, and color. This relation links the production of starlight and its absorption by dust to the subsequent reemission of the absorbed light in the IR. Galaxy models that self-consistently treat dust absorption and emission as well as stellar populations will need to reproduce these fitted relations in the low-redshift universe.<br />16 pages, 11 figures, 2 tables. Appearing in the GALEX special issue of ApJ Supp. (29 papers)

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....08b5d92a16485f51d5caa531c5a18620