How to distinguish starbursts and quiescently star-forming galaxies: The `bimodal' submillimetre galaxy population as a case study
Christopher C. Hayward, Patrik Jonsson, Du\v{s}an Kere\v{s}, Benjamin, Magnelli, Lars Hernquist, T. J. Cox

TL;DR
This study uses simulations and dust modeling to identify observational indicators that distinguish between quiescently star-forming and starburst submillimetre galaxies, revealing a heterogeneous high-redshift galaxy population.
Contribution
It introduces effective dust temperature thresholds and other diagnostics to differentiate galaxy types using integrated data, advancing understanding of SMG diversity.
Findings
Higher dust temperatures correlate with starburst activity.
Starburst SMGs show higher infrared luminosity to gas mass ratios.
Diagnostics can distinguish galaxy star formation modes from observations.
Abstract
In recent work (arXiv:1101.0002) we have suggested that the high-redshift (z ~ 2-4) bright submillimetre galaxy (SMG) population is heterogeneous, with major mergers contributing both at early stages, where quiescently star-forming discs are blended into one submm source (`galaxy-pair SMGs'), and late stages, where mutual tidal torques drive gas inflows and cause strong starbursts. Here we combine hydrodynamic simulations of major mergers with 3-D dust radiative transfer calculations to determine observational diagnostics that can distinguish between quiescently star-forming SMGs and starburst SMGs via integrated data alone. We fit the far-IR SEDs of the simulated galaxies with the optically thin single-temperature modified blackbody, the full form of the single-temperature modified blackbody, and a power-law temperature-distribution model. The effective dust temperature, T_dust, and…
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