Nebular emission and the Lyman continuum photon escape fraction in CALIFA early-type galaxies
P. Papaderos, J.M. Gomes, J.M. Vilchez, C. Kehrig, M.D. Lehnert, B., Ziegler, S.F. Sanchez, B. Husemann, A. Monreal-Ibero, R. Garcia-Benito, J., Bland-Hawthorn, C. Coritjo, A. de Lorenzo-Caceres, A. del Olmo, J., Falcon-Barroso, L. Galbany, J. Iglesias-Paramo, A.R. Lopez-Sanchez

TL;DR
This study uses CALIFA integral field spectroscopy to analyze the warm interstellar medium in early-type galaxies, revealing how Lyman continuum photon escape affects nebular emission and challenges traditional AGN detection methods.
Contribution
It introduces a new classification of early-type galaxies based on nebular emission and photon escape fraction, highlighting the role of LyC leakage in interpreting faint emission lines.
Findings
Type i ETGs have nearly constant EWs and low photon escape fraction.
Type ii ETGs show inward-increasing EWs and high photon escape fraction.
Photon escape can significantly reduce emission-line luminosities, affecting AGN detection.
Abstract
We use deep integral field spectroscopy data from the CALIFA survey to study the warm interstellar medium (WIM) of 32 nearby early-type galaxies (ETGs). We propose a tentative subdivision of our sample ETGs into two groups, according to their Ha equivalent width (EW) and Lyman continuum (LyC) photon escape fraction (PLF). Type i ETGs show nearly constant EWs and a PLF~0, suggesting that photoionization by post-AGB stars is the main driver of their faint extranuclear nebular emission. Type ii ETGs are characterized by very low, outwardly increasing EWs, and a PLF as large as ~0.9 in their centers. Such properties point to a low, and inwardly decreasing WIM density and/or volume filling factor. We argue that, because of extensive LyC photon leakage, emission-line luminosities and EWs are reduced in type ii ETG nuclei by at least one order of magnitude. Consequently, the line weakness of…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
