Modeling the Extragalactic Background Light from Stars and Dust
Justin D. Finke, Soebur Razzaque, and Charles D. Dermer

TL;DR
This paper develops an extended model of the extragalactic background light (EBL) incorporating post-main sequence stars and dust reprocessing, providing improved estimates of EBL energy density and implications for gamma-ray absorption.
Contribution
The model extends previous EBL models by including post-main sequence stars and dust re-emission as blackbodies, aligning well with observational data and enhancing gamma-ray absorption predictions.
Findings
Best fit model matches luminosity density data across redshifts.
EBL energy density is close to galaxy count lower limits.
Universe is optically thin to gamma rays below 20 GeV.
Abstract
The extragalactic background light (EBL) from the far infrared through the visible and extending into the ultraviolet is thought to be dominated by starlight, either through direct emission or through absorption and reradiation by dust. This is the most important energy range for absorbing -rays from distant sources such as blazars and gamma-ray bursts and producing electron positron pairs. In previous work we presented EBL models in the optical through ultraviolet by consistently taking into account the star formation rate (SFR), initial mass function (IMF) and dust extinction, and treating stars on the main sequence as blackbodies. This technique is extended to include post-main sequence stars and reprocessing of starlight by dust. In our simple model, the total energy absorbed by dust is assumed to be re-emitted as three blackbodies in the infrared, one at 40 K representing warm,…
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