1998A&A...334..772B


Query : 1998A&A...334..772B

1998A&A...334..772B - Astronomy and Astrophysics, volume 334, 772-782 (1998/6-3)

The observation of the nearby universe in UV and in FIR: an evidence for a moderate extinction in present day star forming galaxies.

BUAT V. and BURGARELLA D.

Abstract (from CDS):

We study the FIR and UV-visible properties of star forming galaxies in the nearby Universe. This comparison is performed using the local luminosity functions at UV and FIR wavelengths and on individual starburst galaxies for which photometric data from UV to NIR and FIR are available. The FIR and UV luminosity functions have quite different shapes : the UV function exhibits a strong increase for low luminosity galaxies whereas the FIR tail towards ultra luminous galaxies (L>1011L) is not detected in UV. The comparison of the FIR and UV local luminosity densities argues for a rather moderate extinction in nearby disk galaxies. The galaxies selected to be detected in FIR and UV are found to be located in the medium range of both luminosity functions. An emphasis is made on starburst galaxies. For a sample of 22 of these objects, it is found that the UV (912-3650Å), the visible (3600-12500Å) and the NIR (12500-22000Å) wavelength range contribute ∼30%, ∼50% and ∼20% respectively to the total emerging stellar emission (for a subsample of 12 galaxies for the NIR and visible light). The mean ratio of the dust to bolometric luminosity of these galaxies is 0.37±0.22 similar to the ratio found for normal spiral galaxies. Only 4 out of the 22 galaxies exhibit a very large extinction with more than 60% of their energy emitted in the FIR-submm range. The mean extinction at 2000Å is found to be ∼1.2mag although with a large dispersion. The UV, visible and NIR emissions of our sample galaxies are consistent with a burst lasting over ∼1Gyr. The conversion factor of the stellar emission into dust emission is found to correlate with the luminosity of the galaxies, brighter galaxies having a higher conversion factor. Since our sample appears to be representative of the mean properties of the galaxy population in FIR and UV, a very large conversion of the stellar light into dust emission can no longer be assumed as a general property of starburst galaxies at least in the local Universe. Instead a larger amount of energy emerging from the present starburst galaxies seems to come from the stars rather than from the dust. We compare the UV properties of our local starburst galaxies to those of recently detected high redshift galaxies. The larger extinction found in the distant galaxies is consistent with the trend we find for the nearby starburst galaxies namely the brighter the galaxies the lower the escape fraction of stellar light.

Abstract Copyright:

Journal keyword(s): galaxies: starburst - galaxies: stellar content - galaxies: ISM - infrared: galaxies - ultraviolet: galaxies - dust, extinction

Simbad objects: 26

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Number of rows : 26
N Identifier Otype ICRS (J2000)
RA
ICRS (J2000)
DEC
Mag U Mag B Mag V Mag R Mag I Sp type #ref
1850 - 2024
#notes
1 M 82 AGN 09 55 52.430 +69 40 46.93 9.61 9.30 8.41     ~ 5855 6
2 NGC 3353 AGN 10 45 22.390 +55 57 37.36 12.90 13.25 12.79     ~ 359 1
3 NVSS J114224+200711 rG 11 42 24.4931317224 +20 07 09.739724664 14.59 14.55 13.84 13.53   ~ 136 1
4 2MFGC 9193 GiC 11 43 13.096 +20 00 17.52 15.91 16.52   15.56   ~ 105 0
5 ACO 1367 ClG 11 44 44.6 +19 41 59           ~ 1076 1
6 IC 732 H2G 11 45 59.883 +20 26 19.85   15.1   14.11   ~ 56 1
7 NGC 3913 AG? 11 50 38.9407040280 +55 21 13.894641396   14.2       ~ 159 0
8 NGC 4194 AGN 12 14 09.615 +54 31 35.93   13.79 13.30     ~ 448 2
9 IC 3258 GiC 12 23 44.4789302568 +12 28 41.951393292   14.3       ~ 153 0
10 NGC 4383 AGN 12 25 25.5 +16 28 12 12.41 12.67 12.12     ~ 252 1
11 NAME Virgo Cluster ClG 12 26 32.1 +12 43 24           ~ 6637 0
12 NGC 4424 H2G 12 27 11.5741235616 +09 25 14.330453700   13.1       ~ 359 0
13 NGC 4519 GiG 12 33 30.278 +08 39 16.06   12.8       ~ 279 0
14 NGC 4532 GiP 12 34 19.329 +06 28 03.73   12.3       ~ 286 2
15 IC 3576 AGN 12 36 37.675 +06 37 15.19   15.90 15.40     ~ 117 1
16 NGC 4670 AG? 12 45 17.150 +27 07 31.76   12.6 12.90     ~ 259 0
17 Z 160-76 EmG 12 59 40.1487854640 +28 37 50.889845892   15.6       ~ 64 0
18 ACO 1656 ClG 12 59 44.40 +27 54 44.9           ~ 4795 2
19 NGC 4922 SyG 13 01 25.2660290577 +29 18 49.879144069   15.60 14.67 13.85   ~ 252 5
20 Z 160-106 EmG 13 02 07.8577523999 +27 38 53.583458834   15.1       ~ 113 0
21 Z 160-139 SBG 13 06 38.141 +28 50 56.12   15.19 14.83 13.15   ~ 81 0
22 NGC 5253 AGN 13 39 55.990 -31 38 24.11 11.48 10.94 10.49 10.33 13.47 ~ 1365 4
23 NGC 5477 AG? 14 05 33.318 +54 27 37.85 13.94 14.36 14.01     ~ 209 1
24 NGC 7552 Sy1 23 16 10.66 -42 35 04.7 11.34 11.22 10.57 10.08 11.1 ~ 552 3
25 NGC 7673 EmG 23 27 41.060 +23 35 20.18 12.84 13.17 12.76     ~ 275 1
26 NGC 7677 GiP 23 28 06.240 +23 31 53.19 13.93 13.93 13.19     ~ 125 1

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