Extinction in the 11.2 micron PAH band and the low L11.2/LIR in ULIRGs
Abstract
We present a method for recovering the intrinsic (extinction-corrected) luminosity of the 11.2 micron PAH band in galaxy spectra. Using 105 high S/N Spitzer/IRS spectra of star-forming galaxies, we show that the equivalent width ratio of the 12.7 and 11.2 micron PAH bands is independent on the optical depth, with small dispersion of ~5% indicative of a nearly constant intrinsic flux ratio Rint = (f12.7/f11.2)int = 0.377 +/- 0.020. Conversely, the observed flux ratio, Robs = (f12.7/f11.2)obs strongly correlates with the silicate strength (Ssil) confirming that differences in Robs reflect variation in the optical depth. The relation between Robs and Ssil reproduces predictions for the Galactic Centre extinction law but disagrees with other laws. We calibrate the total extinction affecting the 11.2 micron PAH from Robs, which we apply to another sample of 215 galaxies with accurate measurements of the total infrared luminosity (LIR) to investigate the impact of extinction on L11.2/LIR. Correlation between L11.2/LIR and Robs independently on LIR suggests that increased extinction explains the well known decrease in the average L11.2/LIR at high LIR. The extinction-corrected L11.2 is proportional to LIR in the range LIR/Lsun = 109--1013. These results consolidate L11.2 as a robust tracer of star formation in galaxies.
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