Calibration of the total infrared luminosity of nearby galaxies from Spitzer and Herschel bands
M. Galametz, R. C. Kennicutt, D. Calzetti, G. Aniano, B. T. Draine, M., Boquien, B. Brandl, K. V. Croxall, D. A. Dale, C. W. Engelbracht, K. D., Gordon, B. Groves, C.-N. Hao, G. Helou, J. L. Hinz, L. K. Hunt, B. D., Johnson, Y. Li, E. Murphy, H. Roussel, K. Sandstrom

TL;DR
This paper develops empirical calibrations using Spitzer and Herschel infrared bands to accurately estimate the total infrared luminosity of nearby galaxies, considering resolved elements and integrated measurements.
Contribution
It introduces new calibration methods for deriving total infrared luminosity from monochromatic and combined Spitzer and Herschel data, validated with resolved galaxy observations.
Findings
PACS 100 um band is the most reliable monochromatic tracer of LTIR.
Using data up to 250 um yields LTIR estimates within 10% of full coverage.
Strong correlation between SPIRE 250 um and LTIR, with some scatter.
Abstract
We present new empirical calibrations to estimate resolved and integrated total infrared luminosities from Spitzer and Herschel bands used as monochromatic or combined tracers. We base our calibrations on resolved elements of nearby galaxies (3 to 30 Mpc) observed with Herschel. We perform a resolved SED modelling of these objects using the Draine and Li (2007) dust models and investigate the influence of the addition of SPIRE measurements in the estimation of LTIR. We find that using data up to 250 um leads to local LTIR values consistent with those obtained with a complete coverage (up to 500 um) within 10 per cent for most of our resolved elements. We then study the distribution of energy in the resolved SEDs of our galaxies. The bulk of energy (30-50 per cent) is contained in the (70-160 um) band. The (24-70 um) fraction decreases with increasing metallicity. The (160-1100 um)…
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