Are Spiral Disks Really Opaque ?
Abstract
We compare the ultra-violet, optical, and far-infrared emission for a sample of 135 spiral galaxies in order to address the widely debated problem concerning the opacity of spiral disks. We find that the re-radiation of the dust, estimated from the far-infrared emission, is on average only 31 1 percent of the bolometric luminosity of a spiral galaxy, indicating that less than one third of the stellar radiation is absorbed and then re-radiated by dust in a spiral disk. Applying a radiation transfer model which assumes a `Sandwich' configuration for the spiral disk, and fully takes into account the effect of scattering, we find for our sample a median of the face-on blue (4400Å) optical depth τB=0.49 and the mean <τB> =0.60 0.04, indicating that most spiral galaxies in our sample are not opaque for blue light ( τB <1).
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