Optical vs. infrared studies of dusty galaxies and AGN: (I) Nebular emission lines
Vivienne Wild (1), Brent Groves (2), Timothy Heckman (3), Paule, Sonnentrucker (3), Lee Armus (4), David Schiminovich (5), Benjamin Johnson, (6), Lucimara Martins (7), Stephanie LaMassa (3) ((1) IAP Paris, (2) Leiden, Observatory, (3) JHU, (4) SSC Caltech, (5) Columbia

TL;DR
This study compares optical and infrared nebular emission lines in various galaxy types to evaluate dust attenuation corrections, finding that a single attenuation curve can effectively correct for dust effects across different galaxy populations.
Contribution
It provides explicit dust attenuation corrections for key emission lines and demonstrates that a universal attenuation curve can be applied to diverse galaxy samples.
Findings
A single dust correction curve corrects H alpha emission within a factor of 2.
Optical [OIII] luminosities can be corrected within a factor of 3.
The attenuation suffered by AGN and star-forming regions is similar.
Abstract
Optical nebular emission lines are commonly used to estimate the star formation rate of galaxies and the black hole accretion rate of their central active nucleus. The accuracy of the conversion from line strengths to physical properties depends upon the accuracy to which the lines can be corrected for dust attenuation. For studies of single galaxies with normal amounts of dust, most dust corrections result in the same derived properties within the errors. However, for statistical studies of populations of galaxies, or for studies of galaxies with higher dust contents such as might be found in some classes of "transition" galaxies, significant uncertainty arises from the dust attenuation correction. We compare the strength of the predominantly unobscured mid-IR [NeII]15.5um + [NeIII]12.8um emission lines to the optical H alpha emission lines in four samples of galaxies: (i) ordinary…
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