The IRX-beta relation on sub-galactic scales in star-forming galaxies of the Herschel Reference Survey
M. Boquien, V. Buat, A. Boselli, M. Baes, G. J. Bendo, L. Ciesla, A., Cooray, L. Cortese, S. Eales, G. Gavazzi, H. L. Gomez, V. Lebouteiller, C., Pappalardo, M. Pohlen, M. W. L. Smith, L. Spinoglio

TL;DR
This study investigates why normal star-forming galaxies deviate from the UV colour-attenuation relation seen in starburst galaxies, highlighting intrinsic UV colour differences and attenuation curve variations as key factors.
Contribution
It demonstrates that intrinsic UV colour differences and attenuation curve variations explain deviations in the UV colour-attenuation relation in normal galaxies, using SED modeling of HRS galaxies.
Findings
Intrinsic UV colour differences cause deviations
Variations in attenuation curve shape have a secondary effect
Standard age estimators poorly predict intrinsic UV colour
Abstract
UV and optical surveys are essential to gain insight into the processes driving galaxy formation and evolution. The rest-frame UV emission is key to measure the cosmic SFR. However, UV light is strongly reddened by dust. In starburst galaxies, the UV colour and the attenuation are linked, allowing to correct for dust extinction. Unfortunately, evidence has been accumulating that the relation between UV colour and attenuation is different for normal star-forming galaxies when compared to starburst galaxies. It is still not understood why star-forming galaxies deviate from the UV colour-attenuation relation of starburst galaxies. Previous work and models hint that the role of the shape of the attenuation curve and the age of stellar populations have an important role. In this paper we aim at understanding the fundamental reasons to explain this deviation. We have used the CIGALE SED…
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