The Astronomical Journal (Jan 2024)

Ground- and Space-based Dust Observations of VV 191 Overlapping Galaxy Pair

  • Clayton Robertson,
  • Benne W. Holwerda,
  • Jason Young,
  • William C. Keel,
  • Jessica M. Berkheimer,
  • Kyle Cook,
  • Christopher J. Conselice,
  • Brenda L. Frye,
  • Norman A. Grogin,
  • Anton M. Koekemoer,
  • Camella-Rosa Nasr,
  • Divya Patel,
  • Wade Roemer,
  • Dominic Smith,
  • Rogier A. Windhorst

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-3881/ad39c4
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 167, no. 6
p. 263

Abstract

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The Balmer decrement (H α /H β ) provides a constraint on attenuation, the cumulative effects of dust grains in the ISM. The ratio is a reliable spectroscopic tool for deriving the dust properties of galaxies that determine many different quantities such as star formation rate, metallicity, and SED models. Here, we measure independently both the attenuation and H α /H β of an occulting galaxy pair: VV 191. Attenuation measurements in the visible spectrum ( A _V _,stars ) from dust maps derived from the F606W filter of HST and the F090W filter of JWST are matched with spaxel-by-spaxel H α /H β observations from the George and Cynthia Mitchell Spectrograph of the McDonald Observatory. The 0.5–0.7 μ m bandpass covers the Balmer lines for VV 191. The dust maps of JWST and HST provide the high sensitivity necessary for comparisons and tracking trends of the geometrically favorable galaxy. We present maps and plots of the Balmer lines for the VV 191 galaxy pair and for a specific region highlighting dust lanes for VV 191b in the overlap region. We compute A _V _,H _II from H α /H β and plot both quantities against A _V _,stars . Our results show that regions with higher dust content, residing closer to the spiral center, dominate ionized gas attenuation, leading to an overestimation of A _V _,H _II by a factor of 2. Further out in the spiral arms, the lower dust content leads to more agreement between the attenuations, indicating a lower star formation rate and larger contribution from older stars to the stellar continuum outside the Petrosian radius.

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