Origin of the 12um Emission Across Galaxy Populations from WISE and SDSS Surveys
E. Donoso, Lin Yan, C. Tsai, P. Eisenhardt, D. Stern, R. J. Assef, D., Leisawitz, T. H. Jarrett, S. A. Stanford

TL;DR
This study analyzes the origins of 12-micron emission in galaxies using WISE and SDSS data, revealing that young stars dominate in star-forming galaxies, while older stars contribute in AGN, and establishing correlations with galaxy properties.
Contribution
It provides the largest sample to date linking 12um emission to stellar populations, star formation, and galaxy evolution, highlighting differences between star-forming and AGN-hosting galaxies.
Findings
80% of 12um emission in star-forming galaxies is from stars younger than 0.6 Gyr.
Weak AGN's 12um emission is mainly from older stars aged 1-3 Gyr.
12um luminosity correlates linearly with stellar mass in star-forming galaxies.
Abstract
We cross-matched Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE) sources brighter than 1 mJy at 12um with the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) galaxy spectroscopic catalog to produce a sample of ~10^5 galaxies at <z>=0.08, the largest of its kind. This sample is dominated (70%) by star-forming (SF) galaxies from the blue sequence, with total IR luminosities in the range ~10^8-10^12 L_sun. We identify which stellar populations are responsible for most of the 12um emission. We find that most (~80%) of the 12um emission in SF galaxies is produced by stellar populations younger than 0.6 Gyr. In contrast, the 12um emission in weak AGN (L[OIII]<10^7 L_sun) is produced by older stars, with ages of ~1-3 Gyr. We find that L_[12um] linearly correlates with stellar mass for SF galaxies. At fixed 12um luminosity, weak AGN deviate toward higher masses since they tend to be hosted by massive, early-type…
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