Testing He II Emission from Wolf-Rayet Stars as a Dust Attenuation Measure in eight Nearby Star-forming Galaxies
Abstract
The ability to robustly determine galaxy properties such as masses, ages and star-formation rates is critically limited by the ability to accurately measure dust attenuation. Dust reddening is often characterized by comparing observations to models of either nebular recombination-lines or the ultra violet (UV) continuum. Here, we use a new technique to measure dust reddening by exploiting the HeII λ1640 to λ4686 emission lines originating from the stellar winds of Wolf-Rayet stars. The intrinsic line ratio is determined by atomic physics, enabling an estimate of the stellar reddening similar to how the Balmer lines probe reddening of gas emission. The HeII line ratio is measured from UV and optical spectroscopy using the Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph (STIS) on board the Hubble Space Telescope (HST) for eight nearby galaxies hosting young massive star clusters. We compare our results to dust reddening values estimated from UV spectral slopes and from Balmer line ratios and find tentative evidence for systematic differences. The reddening derived from the He II lines tends to be higher, whereas that from the UV continuum tends to be lower. A larger sample size is needed to confirm this trend. If confirmed, this may indicate an age sequence probing different stages of dust clearing. Broad HeII lines have also been detected in galaxies more distant than our sample, providing the opportunity to estimate the dust reddening of the youngest stellar populations out to distances of 100 Mpc.
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