The Revealing Dust: Mid-Infrared Activity in Hickson Compact Group Galaxy Nuclei
S. C. Gallagher (UCLA), K. E. Johnson (UVA, NRAO), A. E. Hornschemeier, (GSFC), J. C. Charlton (Penn State), J. E. Hibbard (NRAO)

TL;DR
This study analyzes mid-infrared activity in galaxy nuclei within Hickson Compact Groups, introducing spectral indices to distinguish active from inactive nuclei and exploring their relation to galaxy environment and evolution.
Contribution
It introduces alpha_{IRAC}, a new spectral index for identifying mid-IR activity, and compares its effectiveness with other diagnostics in a sample of compact group galaxies.
Findings
Over half of the nuclei show mid-IR activity indicative of star formation or black hole accretion.
Alpha_{IRAC} effectively separates active and inactive nuclei, outperforming other measures.
A correlation exists between mid-IR activity and the total HI mass in galaxy groups.
Abstract
We present a sample of 46 galaxy nuclei from 12 nearby (z<4500 km/s) Hickson Compact Groups (HCGs) with a complete suite of 1-24 micron 2MASS+Spitzer nuclear photometry. For all objects in the sample, blue emission from stellar photospheres dominates in the near-IR through the 3.6 micron IRAC band. Twenty-five of 46 (54%) galaxy nuclei show red, mid-IR continua characteristic of hot dust powered by ongoing star formation and/or accretion onto a central black hole. We introduce alpha_{IRAC}, the spectral index of a power-law fit to the 4.5-8.0 micron IRAC data, and demonstrate that it cleanly separates the mid-IR active and non-active HCG nuclei. This parameter is more powerful for identifying low to moderate-luminosity mid-IR activity than other measures which include data at rest-frame lambda<3.6 micron that may be dominated by stellar photospheric emission. While the HCG galaxies…
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