Mapping the Spatial Distribution of Dust Extinction in NGC 959 Using Broadband Visible and mid-IR Filters
K. Tamura, R.A. Jansen, R.A. Windhorst (Arizona State University)

TL;DR
This paper introduces a novel method to map dust extinction in galaxies using only optical V-band and mid-IR images, enabling detailed two-dimensional dust distribution analysis applicable to various stellar populations.
Contribution
The paper presents a new pixel-based technique to estimate and map dust extinction in galaxies using broadband optical and mid-IR images, effective across different stellar populations and metallicities.
Findings
Successfully mapped dust distribution in NGC 959.
Method traces dust lanes not visible at lower resolution.
Potential application to high-redshift galaxy observations.
Abstract
We present a method to estimate and map the two-dimensional distribution of dust extinction in the late-type spiral galaxy NGC 959 from the theoretical and observed flux ratio of optical V and mid-IR (MIR) 3.6 micron images. Our method is applicable to both young and old stellar populations for a range of metallicities, and is not restricted to lines-of-sight toward star-formation (SF) regions. We explore this method using a pixel-based analysis on images of NGC 959 obtained in the V-band at the Vatican Advanced Technology Telescope (VATT) and at 3.6 micron (L-band) with Spitzer/IRAC. We present the original and extinction corrected GALEX far-UV (FUV) and near-UV (NUV) images, as well as optical UBVR images of NGC 959. While the dust lanes are not clearly evident at GALEX resolution, our dust map clearly traces the dust that can be seen silhouetted against the galaxy's disk in the…
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