171 research outputs found
A star formation study of the ATLAS3D early-type galaxies with the AKARI all-sky survey
The star formation properties of early-type galaxies (ETGs) are currently the
subject of considerable interest, particularly whether they differ from those
of gas-rich spirals. We perform a systematic study of star formation in a large
sample of local ETGs using polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH) and dust
emission, focusing on the galaxies' star formation rates (SFRs) and star
formation efficiencies (SFEs). Our sample is composed of the 260 ETGs from the
ATLAS3D survey, from which we use the cold gas measurements (HI and CO). The
SFRs are estimated from stellar, PAH and dust fits to spectral energy
distributions created from new AKARI measurements and literature data from WISE
and 2MASS. The mid-infrared luminosities of non-CO-detected galaxies are well
correlated with their stellar luminosities, showing that they trace
(circum)stellar dust emission. CO-detected galaxies show an excess above these
correlations, uncorrelated with their stellar luminosities, indicating that
they likely contain PAHs and dust of interstellar origin. PAH and dust
luminosities of CO-detected galaxies show tight correlations with their
molecular gas masses, and the derived current SFRs are typically 0.01-1
Msun/yr. These SFRs systematically decrease with stellar age at fixed stellar
mass, while they correlate nearly linearly with stellar mass at fixed age. The
majority of local ETGs follow the same star-formation law as local star-forming
galaxies, and their current SFEs do not depend on either stellar mass or age.
Our results clearly indicate that molecular gas is fueling current star
formation in local ETGs, that appear to acquire this gas via mechanisms
regulated primarily by stellar mass. The current SFEs of local ETGs are similar
to those of local star-forming galaxies, indicating that their low SFRs are
likely due to smaller cold gas fractions rather than a suppression of star
formation.Comment: 30 pages, 12 figures, 4 tables, accepted for publication in A&
AKARI IRC 2.5-5 um Spectroscopy of Infrared Galaxies over a Wide Luminosity Range
We present the result of a systematic infrared 2.5-5 um spectroscopic study
of 22 nearby infrared galaxies over a wide infrared luminosity range (10 <
log(L_IR / Lsun) < 13) obtained from AKARI Infrared Camera (IRC). The unique
band of the AKARI IRC spectroscopy enables us to access both the 3.3 um
polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH) emission feature from star forming
activity and the continuum of torus-dust emission heated by an active galactic
nucleus (AGN). Applying our AGN diagnostics to the AKARI spectra, we discover
14 buried AGNs. The large fraction of buried AGNs suggests that AGN activity
behind the dust is almost ubiquitous in ultra-/luminous infrared galaxies
(U/LIRGs). We also find that both the fraction and energy contribution of
buried AGNs increase with infrared luminosity from 10 < log(L_IR / Lsun) < 13,
including normal infrared galaxies with log (L_IR / Lsun) < 11. The energy
contribution from AGNs in the total infrared luminosity is only ~7% in LIRGs
and ~20% in ULIRGs, suggesting that the majority of the infrared luminosity
originates from starburst activity. Using the PAH emission, we investigate the
luminosity relation between star formation and AGN. We find that these infrared
galaxies exhibit higher star formation rates than optically selected Seyfert
galaxies with the same AGN luminosities, implying that infrared galaxies could
be an early evolutionary phase of AGN.Comment: 13 pages, 8 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
Search for the Infrared Emission Features from Deuterated Interstellar Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons
We report the results of a search for emission features from interstellar
deuterated polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) in the 4um region with the
Infrared Camera (IRC) onboard AKARI. No significant excess emission is seen in
4.3-4.7um in the spectra toward the Orion Bar and M17 after the subtraction of
line emission from the ionized gas. A small excess of emission remains at
around 4.4 and 4.65um, but the ratio of their intensity to that of the band
emission from PAHs at 3.3-3.5um is estimated as 2-3%. This is an order of
magnitude smaller than the values previously reported and also those predicted
by the model of deuterium depletion onto PAHs. Since the subtraction of the
ionized gas emission introduces an uncertainty, the deuterated PAH features are
also searched for in the reflection nebula GN 18.14.0, which does not show
emission lines from ionized gas. We obtain a similar result that excess
emission in the 4um region, if present, is about 2% of the PAH band emission in
the 3um region. The present study does not find evidence for the presence of
the large amount of deuterated PAHs that the depletion model predicts. The
results are discussed in the context of deuterium depletion in the interstellar
medium.Comment: 24 pages, 6 figures, to appear in Ap
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