An extended dust disk in a spiral galaxy; An occulting galaxy pair in ANGST
B. W. Holwerda, W. C. Keel, B. Williams, J. J. Dalcanton, and R. S. de, Jong

TL;DR
This study analyzes an occulting galaxy pair in ANGST data, revealing an extended dusty disk with extinction properties similar to the Milky Way, and discusses methods for modeling overlapping galaxies.
Contribution
First detailed mapping of dust extinction out to 1.5 R extsubscript{25} in a spiral galaxy using HST data, highlighting dust distribution diversity and modeling approaches.
Findings
Dust disk extends to 1.5 R extsubscript{25} with extinction similar to Milky Way
Sampling effects flatten the observed extinction law
Isophotal models are preferred for high-quality overlapping galaxy data
Abstract
We present an analysis of an occulting galaxy pair, serendipitously discovered in ACS Nearby Galaxy Survey Treasury (ANGST) observations of NGC 253 taken with Hubble Space Telescope's Advanced Camera for Survey in F475W, F606W$ and F814W (SDSS-g, broad V and I). The foreground disk system (at z < 0.06) shows a dusty disk much more extended than the starlight, with spiral lanes seen in extinction out to 1.5 R\_25, approximately six half-light radii. This pair is the first where extinction can be mapped reliably out to this distance from the center. The spiral arms of the extended dust disk show typical extinction values of A\_F475W ~ 0.25, A\_F606W ~ 0.25, and A\_F814W ~ 0.15. The extinction law inferred from these measures is similar to the local Milky Way one, and we show that the smoothing effects of sampling at limited spatial resolution (<57 pc, in these data) flattens the observed…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Remote Sensing in Agriculture · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae
