Mid-infrared spectroscopy of infrared-luminous galaxies at z~0.5-3
A. Hernan-Caballero, I. Perez-Fournon, E. Hatziminaoglou, A., Afonso-Luis, M. Rowan-Robinson, D. Rigopoulou, D. Farrah, C. J. Lonsdale, T., Babbedge, D. Clements, S. Serjeant, F. Pozzi, M. Vaccari, F. M., Montenegro-Montes, I. Valtchanov, E. Gonzalez-Solares, S. Oliver, D. Shupe

TL;DR
This study analyzes mid-infrared spectra of 70 infrared-luminous galaxies at redshifts 0.5-3, classifying sources and estimating star formation rates, revealing differences between QSOs and obscured AGN, and exploring the connection between obscuration and star formation.
Contribution
Introduces a new infrared diagnostic for classifying galaxy types and provides detailed star formation rate estimates for diverse galaxy populations at high redshift.
Findings
Star formation rates in QSOs are 50-100 solar masses per year.
Obscured AGN show 2-3 times higher SFR than QSOs of similar MIR luminosity.
PAH features suggest destruction by energetic photons in AGN environments.
Abstract
We present results on low-resolution mid-infrared (MIR) spectra of 70 infrared-luminous galaxies obtained with the Infrared Spectrograph (IRS) onboard Spitzer. We selected sources from the European Large Area Infrared Survey (ELAIS) with S15 > 0.8 mJy and photometric or spectroscopic z > 1. About half of the sample are QSOs in the optical, while the remaining sources are galaxies, comprising both obscured AGN and starbursts. We classify the spectra using well-known infrared diagnostics, as well as a new one that we propose, into three types of source: those dominated by an unobscured AGN (QSOs), obscured AGN, and starburst-dominated sources. Starbursts concentrate at z ~ 0.6-1.0 favored by the shift of the 7.7-micron PAH band into the selection 15 micron band, while AGN spread over the 0.5 < z < 3.1 range. Star formation rates (SFR) are estimated for individual sources from the…
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