Far-Ultraviolet and Far-Infrared Bivariate Luminosity Function of Galaxies: Complex Relation between Stellar and Dust Emission
Tsutomu T. Takeuchi (1), Akane Sakurai (1), Fang-Ting Yuan (1),, Veronique Buat (2), and Denis Burgarella (2) ((1) Division of Particle and, Astrophysical Science, Nagoya University, (2) Laboratoire d'Astrophysique de, Marseille)

TL;DR
This paper develops a new statistical method using copulas to analyze the complex relationship between ultraviolet and infrared luminosities in galaxies, revealing a stable high correlation across redshifts and explaining their nonlinear connection.
Contribution
Introduces a novel copula-based mathematical approach to construct the UV-IR bivariate luminosity function of galaxies from observational data.
Findings
High correlation coefficient (~0.95 at z=0) between FUV and FIR emissions.
The UV-IR relation remains stable across redshifts from 0 to 1.
The evolution of the bivariate luminosity function is mainly driven by univariate LF changes.
Abstract
Far-ultraviolet (FUV) and far-infrared (FIR) luminosity functions (LFs) of galaxies show a strong evolution from to , but the FIR LF evolves much stronger than the FUV one. The FUV is dominantly radiated from newly formed short-lived OB stars, while the FIR is emitted by dust grains heated by the FUV radiation field. It is known that dust is always associated with star formation activity. Thus, both FUV and FIR are tightly related to the star formation in galaxies, but in a very complicated manner. In order to disentangle the relation between FUV and FIR emissions, we estimate the UV-IR bivariate LF (BLF) of galaxies with {\sl GALEX} and {\sl AKARI} All-Sky Survey datasets. Recently we invented a new mathematical method to construct the BLF with given marginals and prescribed correlation coefficient. This method makes use of a tool from mathematical statistics, so called…
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