Metallicity Effects on Mid-Infrared Colors and the 8 micron PAH Emission in Galaxies

C. W. Engelbracht, K. D. Gordon, G. H. Rieke, M. W. Werner, D. A. Dale, & W. B. Latter 2005, ApJ, 628, L29


We examine colors from 3.6 micron to 24 micron as a function of metallicity (O/H) for a sample of 34 galaxies. The galaxies range over 2 orders of magnitude in metallicity. They display an abrupt shift in the 8 micron to 24 micron color between metallicities 1/3 to 1/5 of the solar value. The mean 8 micron to 24 micron flux density ratio below and above 12 + log (O/H) = 8.2 is 0.08 +/- 0.04 and 0.70 +/- 0.53, respectively. We use mid-infrared colors and spectroscopy to demonstrate that the shift is primarily due to a decrease in the 8 micron flux density as opposed to an increase in the 24 micron flux density. This result is most simply interpreted as due to a weakening at low metallicity of the mid-infrared emission bands usually attributed to PAHs (polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons) relative to the small-grain dust emission. However, existing empirical spectral energy distribution models cannot account for the observed short-wavelength (i.e., below 8 micron) colors of the low-metallicity galaxies merely by reducing the strength of the PAH features; some other emission source (e.g., hot dust) is required.

[XXX/astro-ph Preprint] [ADS Entry]

ADS Citation Query
# citations = 144
average # citations/year = 24.00 (# years = 6)
# citations vs. year [year=citations]
[2010=16] [2009=35] [2008=29] [2007=27] [2006=32] [2005=5]
[determined from ADS on 10 Sep 2010]


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