Stellar population and dust extinction in an ultraluminous infrared galaxy at z=1.135
K. Kawara, S. Oyabu, Y. Matsuoka, Y. Yoshii, T. Minezaki, H., Sameshima, N. Asami, N. Ienaka, T. Kozasa

TL;DR
This study analyzes the stellar population and dust properties of an ultraluminous infrared galaxy at z=1.135, revealing a young, metal-rich stellar population, significant dust obscuration, and potential AGN contribution to infrared luminosity.
Contribution
It provides detailed modeling of stellar age, metallicity, dust extinction, and infrared emission, highlighting the galaxy's dust shell and possible AGN influence, which are novel insights for this galaxy type.
Findings
Stellar population age 40-200 Myr with 2.5 Z_sun metallicity
Infrared luminosity of 1.78 x 10^{12} L_sun, indicating heavy obscuration or AGN contribution
Dust mass of 2.0 x 10^8 M_sun and dust production rate of 0.24 M_sun per SN
Abstract
We present the detailed optical to far-infrared observations of SST J1604+4304, an ULIRG at z = 1.135. Analyzing the stellar absorption lines, namely, the CaII H & K and Balmer H lines in the optical spectrum, we derive the upper limits of an age for the stellar population. Given this constraint, the minimum {chi}^2 method is used to fit the stellar population models to the observed SED from 0.44 to 5.8um. We find the following properties. The stellar population has an age 40 - 200 Myr with a metallicity 2.5 Z_{sun}. The starlight is reddened by E(B-V) = 0.8. The reddening is caused by the foreground dust screen, indicating that dust is depleted in the starburst site and the starburst site is surrounded by a dust shell. The infrared (8-1000um) luminosity is L_{ir} = 1.78 +/- 0.63 * 10^{12} L_{sun}. This is two times greater than that expected from the observed starlight, suggesting…
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