The Spatial Extent of (U)LIRGs in the mid-Infrared I: The Continuum Emission
T. Diaz-Santos (1), V. Charmandaris (1,2), L. Armus (3), A. O. Petric, (3), J. H. Howell (3), E. J. Murphy (3), J. M. Mazzarella (4), S. Veilleux, (5), G. Bothun (6), H. Inami (3), P. N. Appleton (7), A. S. Evans (8), S., Haan (3), J. A. Marshall (3), D. B. Sanders (9)

TL;DR
This study analyzes the spatial extent of mid-infrared emission in LIRGs and ULIRGs, revealing how galaxy luminosity, merger stage, and AGN activity influence the size and distribution of warm dust emission.
Contribution
It introduces a method to quantify the extended MIR emission in LIRGs and ULIRGs, linking it to galaxy properties and providing upper size limits for galaxy cores.
Findings
More than 30% of LIRGs have extended MIR emission beyond 10kpc.
Core sizes of ULIRGs are less than 1.5kpc, increasing compactness with higher luminosity.
Extended MIR emission correlates with IRAS far-IR color, indicating cold dust origin areas.
Abstract
We present an analysis of the extended mid-infrared (MIR) emission of the Great Observatories All-Sky LIRG Survey (GOALS) sample based on 5-15um low resolution spectra obtained with the IRS on Spitzer. We calculate the fraction of extended emission as a function of wavelength for the galaxies in the sample, FEE_lambda. We can identify 3 general types of FEE_lambda: one where it is constant, one where features due to emission lines and PAHs appear more extended than the continuum, and a third which is characteristic of sources with deep silicate absorption at 9.7um. More than 30% of the galaxies have a median FEE_lambda larger than 0.5 implying that at least half of their MIR emission is extended. Luminous Infrared Galaxies (LIRGs) display a wide range of FEE in their warm dust continuum (0<=FEE_13.2um<=0.85). The large values of FEE_13.2um that we find in many LIRGs suggest that their…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
