We study the relationship between the UV continuum slope and infrared excess
(IRX≡LIR/LFUV) predicted by performing dust radiative
transfer on a suite of hydrodynamical simulations of galaxies. Our suite
includes both isolated disk galaxies and mergers intended to be representative
of galaxies at both z∼0 and z∼2−3. Our low-redshift isolated
disks and mergers often populate a region around the the locally calibrated
\citet[][M99]{M99} relation but move well above the relation during
merger-induced starbursts. Our high-redshift simulated galaxies are blue and
IR-luminous, which makes them lie above the M99 relation. The value of UV
continuum slope strongly depends on the dust type used in the radiative
transfer calculations: Milky Way-type dust leads to significantly more negative
(bluer) slopes compared with Small Magellanic Cloud-type dust. The effect on
β due to variations in the dust composition with galaxy properties or
redshift can dominate over other sources of β variations and is the
dominant model uncertainty. The dispersion in β is anticorrelated with
specific star formation rate and tends to be higher for the z∼2−3
simulations. In the actively star-forming z∼2−3 simulated galaxies, dust
attenuation dominates the dispersion in β, whereas in the z∼0
simulations, the contributions of SFH variations and dust are similar. For
low-SSFR systems at both redshifts, SFH variations dominate the dispersion.
Finally, the simulated z∼2−3 isolated disks and mergers both occupy a
region in the \irxbeta\ plane consistent with observed z∼2−3 dusty
star-forming galaxies (DSFGs). Thus, contrary to some claims in the literature,
the blue colors of high-z DSFGs do not imply that they are short-lived
starbursts.Comment: 20 pages+a 4-page appendix, Accepted for publication at Ap