Comparing Ultraviolet and Infrared-Selected Starburst Galaxies in Dust Obscuration and Luminosity
Lusine A. Sargsyan, Daniel W. Weedman, and James R. Houck

TL;DR
This study compares ultraviolet and infrared-selected starburst galaxies to understand dust obscuration and luminosity relationships, revealing that ultraviolet-based corrections underestimate true luminosities, especially for less luminous sources.
Contribution
It provides new empirical relations for dust obscuration correction and luminosity estimates based on combined ultraviolet and infrared observations of starburst galaxies.
Findings
Obscuration correction factors vary with luminosity and selection method.
Ultraviolet-based corrections underestimate true luminosity by factors of 10 for faint sources.
Infrared-selected galaxies show different luminosity-obscuration relations.
Abstract
We present samples of starburst galaxies that represent the extremes discovered with infrared and ultraviolet observations, including 25 Markarian galaxies, 23 ultraviolet luminous galaxies discovered with GALEX, and the 50 starburst galaxies having the largest infrared/ultraviolet ratios. These sources have z < 0.5 and cover a luminosity range of ~ 10^4. Comparisons between infrared luminosities determined with the 7.7 um PAH feature and ultraviolet luminosities from the stellar continuum at 153 nm are used to determine obscuration in starbursts and dependence of this obscuration on infrared or ultraviolet luminosity. A strong selection effect arises for the ultraviolet-selected samples: the brightest sources appear bright because they have the least obscuration. Obscuration correction for the ultraviolet-selected Markarian+GALEX sample has the form log[UV(intrinsic)/UV(observed)] =…
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