Presence of dust with a UV bump in massive, star-forming galaxies at 1 < z < 2.5
S. Noll, D. Pierini, M. Pannella, S. Savaglio

TL;DR
This study investigates the extinction curves of massive, star-forming galaxies at 1<z<2.5, revealing that about one-third exhibit a UV bump, indicating diverse dust properties and distributions affecting galaxy observations.
Contribution
It provides the first evidence of UV bump carriers in high-redshift galaxies and links their presence to dust geometry and stellar population age.
Findings
Approximately one-third of galaxies show a UV bump in their extinction curves.
Galaxies with heavy reddening exhibit more prominent UV bumps.
Dust properties vary between galaxies, resembling a mix of Magellanic Cloud extinction curves.
Abstract
Fundamental properties of the extinction curve, like the slope in the rest-frame ultraviolet (UV) and the presence/absence of a broad absorption excess centred at 2175 A (the UV bump), are investigated for a sample of 108 massive, star-forming galaxies at 1 < z < 2.5, selected from the FDF Spectroscopic Survey, the K20 survey, and the GDDS. These characteristics are constrained from a parametric description of the UV spectral energy distribution (SED) of a galaxy, as enforced by combined stellar population and radiative transfer models for different geometries, dust/stars configurations and dust properties. In at least one third of the sample, there is a robust evidence for extinction curves with at least a moderate UV bump. The presence of the carriers of the UV bump is more evident in galaxies with UV SEDs suffering from heavy reddening. We interpret these results as follows. The…
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