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THE FAR-INFRARED FIR = IRAS region (60-100 micron) TIR = 8-1000 micron (1 micron = 1A/10^4) Silva et al. 1998 0.1 1 10 100 1000 Lambda (micron) Log λ L.

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Presentation on theme: "THE FAR-INFRARED FIR = IRAS region (60-100 micron) TIR = 8-1000 micron (1 micron = 1A/10^4) Silva et al. 1998 0.1 1 10 100 1000 Lambda (micron) Log λ L."— Presentation transcript:

1 THE FAR-INFRARED FIR = IRAS region (60-100 micron) TIR = 8-1000 micron (1 micron = 1A/10^4) Silva et al. 1998 0.1 1 10 100 1000 Lambda (micron) Log λ L λ (10^30 ergs/s)

2 THE FAR-INFRARED Part of the luminosity of a galaxy is absorbed by interstellar dust and re- emitted in the IR (10-300 micron) The most heavily extincted part of the stellar continuum is the UV – therefore the FIR emission can be a sensitive tracer of young stellar populations (and current SF) Silva et al. 1998 0.1 1 10 100 1000 Lambda (micron) Log λ L λ (10^30 ergs/s)

3 THE FAR-INFRARED Two contributions to the FIR emission: a)young stars in starforming regions (warm, λ ~ 60 micron) b)an “infrared cirrus” component (cooler, λ>100 micron), associated with more extended dust heated by the interstellar radiation field Whenever young stars dominate the UV-visible emission and dust opacity is high then a) dominates and the FIR is a good indicator of SFR This is the case in Luminous and Ultraluminous Infrared Galaxies, and mostly works also in late-type starforming galaxies In at least some of the early-type galaxies the FIR emission is due to older stars or AGNs, therefore in these the FIR emission is not a good tracer of SF

4 THE SFR-FIR CALIBRATION “One” calibration based on spectrophotometric models and found : a)Assuming the dust reradiates all the bolometric luminosity (!) (Optically thick case) b)For starbursts (constant SFR) of ages < 10^8 yrs: SFR(solar masses/yr) = 4.5 X 10 -44 L FIR (ergs/s) where L FIR is the luminosity integrated over 8-1000 micron (Kennicutt 1998) Most of other published calibrations within 30%. In quiescent starforming galaxies, the contribution from older stars will tend to lower the coefficient above. Keeping in mind that no calibration applies to all galaxy types and SFHs…

5 Indicators of ongoing star-formation activity - Timescales Emission lines < 3 x 10 7 yrs UV-continuum emission it depends… FIR emission < a few 10^7 (but…it depends on the dominant population of stars heating the dust) Radio emission as FIR (?)

6 LATE-TYPE STARFORMING GALAXIES The FIR luminosity correlates with other SFR tracers such as the UV continuum and Halpha luminosities. FIR flux Halpha flux

7 MIR EMISSION AS A SFR INDICATOR 0.1 1 10 100 1000 Lambda (micron) Log λ L λ (10^30 ergs/s) Near-IR J,H,K bands 12000,16000,22000 A = 1.2, 1.6, 2.2 micron Mid-IR 6-20 micron Far-IR >25 micron (60-100)

8 MIR EMISSION AS A SFR INDICATOR In principle, complex relation between MIR emission and SFR:  continuum emission by warm small dust grains heated by young stars or an AGN  unidentified infrared bands (UIBs a family of features at 3.3, 6.2, 7.7, 8.6, 11.3, 12.7 micron) thought to result from C- C and C-H vibrational bands in hydrocarbons (large, carbon- rich molecules as polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbins, or PAHs?)  continuum emission from the photosphere of evolved stars  emission lines from the ionized interstellar gas e.g. Genzel & Cesarsky ARAA 2000

9 FROM MIR TO FIR Empirical relation between MIR(typically 15micron) and FIR luminosities Chary & Elbaz 2001: strong correlations between luminosity at 12 and 15micron and total IR luminosity (8-1000micron) As it is done for calibrating OII vs Halpha…

10 FROM MIR TO FIR ….much better correlated than with the B band (Chary & Elbaz 2001)

11 FROM MIR TO FIR: ANOTHER METHOD Infrared (8-1000micron) luminosities are interpolated between the MIR and the radio fluxes using best-fitting templates of various starbursts/starforming galaxies and AGNs. (e.g. Flores et al. 1999)

12 SUBMILLIMITER OBSERVATIONS Sampling the IR emission with 850micron fluxes (e.g. Hughes et al. 1998) Negative K-corrections – the flux density of a galaxy at ~800micron with fixed intrinsic luminosity is expected to be roughly constant at all redshifts 1 < z < 10 While the Lyman break technique prefentially selects UV-bright starbursts, the submillimiter emission best identifies IR luminous starbursts. The approaches are complementary (debated relation between the two populations).

13 Negative k-correction for sub-mm sources Blain et al (2002) Phys. Rept, 369,111 K-correction is the dimming due to the (1+z) shifting of the wavelength band (and its width) for a filter with response S( ) In the Rayleigh-Jeans tail of the dust blackbody spectrum, galaxies get brighter as they are redshifted to greater distance!

14 THE FIR-RADIO CORRELATION Condon ARAA 1992 Van der Kruit 1971, 1973 Log L FIR Log L 1.49Ghz

15 THE FIR-RADIO CORRELATION Condon ARAA 1992 is surprising !! For FIR: “warm” and “cirrus” contribution Radio emission originates from complex and poorly understood physics of cosmic-ray generation and energy transfer: Non-thermal component (synchrotron emission of relativistic electrons spiraling in a galaxy magnetic field) Thermal component (free-free emission from ionized hydrogen in HII regions) SNae O, B stars

16 THE FIR-RADIO CORRELATION Condon ARAA 1992 Non-thermal Thermal is still surprising α ~ 0.8 Due to difference in spectral shape, the relative contribution varies with frequency. At <5Ghz (1.4Ghz commonly used), non-thermal conponent dominates (90%) in luminous galaxies α ~ 0.1

17 Indicators of ongoing star-formation activity - Timescales Emission lines < 3 x 10 7 yrs UV-continuum emission it depends… FIR emission < a few 10^7 (but…) Radio emission as FIR (?) (Could be higher: relativistic electrons have lifetimes ≤ 10^8 yr)

18 2) SFR = 2.0 X 10 -41 L([OII]) E(H α ) ergs/s 3) SFR = 1.4 X 10 -28 L nu ergs/s/Hz (L dust-corrected) 1) SFR = 0.9 X 10 -41 L(H α ) E(H α ) ergs/s 4) SFR = 4.5 X 10 -44 L FIR (ergs/s) (Solar luminosities) 6) SUBMILLIMITRICO COME FIR 5) 7) 8) erg/s primaria secondaria

19 1 + z SFR (M sun yr -1 Mpc -3) Hopkins 2004 Evolution of SFR density with redshift, using a common obscuration correction where necessary. The points are color-coded by rest-frame wavelength as follows: Blue: UV; green: [O II]; red: H and H ; pink: X-ray, FIR, submillimeter, and radio. The solid line shows the evolving 1.4 GHz LF derived by Haarsma et al. (2000). The dot-dashed line shows the least-squares fit to all the z < 1 data points, log( * ) = 3.10 log(1 + z) - 1.80. The dotted lines show pure luminosity evolution for the Condon (1989) 1.4 GHz LF, at rates of Q = 2.5 (lower dotted line) and Q = 4.1 (upper dotted line). The dashed line shows the "fossil" record from Local Group galaxies (Hopkins et al. 2001b).200019892001b

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