Unusual PAH Emission in Nearby Early-Type Galaxies: A Signature of an Intermediate Age Stellar Population?
O. Vega, A. Bressan, P. Panuzzo, R. Rampazzo, M. Clemens, G. L., Granato, L. Buson, L. Silva, W. W. Zeilinger

TL;DR
This study analyzes Spitzer-IRS spectra of early-type galaxies revealing unusual PAH features dominated by large, neutral molecules likely originating from carbon star material, indicating recent stellar rejuvenation.
Contribution
It identifies a novel PAH emission signature in early-type galaxies linked to recent stellar activity and carbon star contributions, differing from typical star-forming galaxy spectra.
Findings
PAH emission dominated by large, neutral molecules
Presence of broad dust features at 8.2 and 12 microns
PAH molecules likely originate from carbon stars in recent rejuvenation episodes
Abstract
We present the analysis of Spitzer-IRS spectra of four early-type galaxies, NGC 1297, NGC 5044, NGC 6868, and NGC 7079, all classified as LINERs in the optical bands. Their IRS spectra present the full series of H2 rotational emission lines in the range 5--38 microns, atomic lines, and prominent PAH features. We investigate the nature and origin of the PAH emission, characterized by unusually low 6 -- 9/11.3 microns inter-band ratios. After the subtraction of a passive early type galaxy template, we find that the 7 -- 9 microns spectral region requires dust features not normally present in star forming galaxies. Each spectrum is then analyzed with the aim of identifying their components and origin. In contrast to normal star forming galaxies, where cationic PAH emission prevails, our 6--14 microns spectra seem to be dominated by large and neutral PAH emission, responsible for the low 6…
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