Variation of Mid and Far-IR Luminosities among Early-Type Galaxies: Relation to Stellar Metallicity and Cold Dust
William G. Mathews, Pasquale Temi, Fabrizio Brighenti, Alexandre, Amblard

TL;DR
This study investigates the variation of mid and far-infrared luminosities in early-type galaxies, linking them to stellar metallicity and cold dust, revealing complex dust dynamics influenced by AGN activity and galaxy mergers.
Contribution
It uncovers the relationship between IR luminosities, stellar metallicity, and dust transport mechanisms in elliptical galaxies, highlighting the role of AGN feedback and mergers.
Findings
IR luminosity correlates with stellar metallicity in ellipticals.
Cold dust emission may originate from recent mergers or AGN-driven dust transport.
Elliptical galaxies show significant IR variability, indicating active dust cycles.
Abstract
The Hubble morphological sequence from early to late galaxies corresponds to an increasing rate of specific star formation. The Hubble sequence also follows a banana-shaped correlation between 24 and 70 micron luminosities, both normalized with the K-band luminosity. We show that this correlation is significantly tightened if galaxies with central AGN emission are removed, but the cosmic scatter of elliptical galaxies in both 24 and 70 micron luminosities remains significant along the correlation. We find that the 24 micron variation among ellipticals correlates with stellar metallicity, reflecting emission from hot dust in winds from asymptotic giant branch stars of varying metallicity. Infrared surface brightness variations in elliptical galaxies indicate that the K - 24 color profile is U-shaped for reasons that are unclear. In some elliptical galaxies cold interstellar dust emitting…
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