Explaining the [CII]158um Deficit in Luminous Infrared Galaxies - First Results from a Herschel/PACS Study of the GOALS Sample
T. Diaz-Santos (1), L. Armus (1), V. Charmandaris (2,3), S. Stierwalt, (4), E. J. Murphy (5), S. Haan (6), H. Inami (7), S. Malhotra (8), R., Meijerink (9), G. Stacey (10), A. O. Petric (11), A. S. Evans (4,12), S., Veilleux (13,14), P. P. van der Werf (15), S. Lord (16)

TL;DR
This study investigates the [CII]158um emission line in 241 luminous infrared galaxies, revealing its decline with increasing dust temperature and compactness, and questioning its reliability as a star formation rate indicator.
Contribution
First comprehensive Herschel/PACS survey of [CII] emission in LIRGs, establishing empirical relations and analyzing the impact of dust temperature and AGN presence on [CII]/FIR ratios.
Findings
[CII]/FIR ratio decreases with dust temperature and compactness.
Pure star-forming LIRGs have a mean [CII]/FIR of ~4x10^-3.
Most AGNs do not significantly affect the [CII]/FIR ratio.
Abstract
We present the first results of a survey of the [CII]158um emission line in 241 luminous infrared galaxies (LIRGs) comprising the Great Observatories All-sky Survey (GOALS) sample, obtained with the PACS instrument on board Herschel. The [CII] luminosities of the LIRGs in GOALS range from ~10^7 to 2x10^9 Lsun. We find that LIRGs show a tight correlation of [CII]/FIR with far-IR flux density ratios, with a strong negative trend spanning from ~10^-2 to 10^-4, as the average temperature of dust increases. We find correlations between the [CII]/FIR ratio and the strength of the 9.7um silicate absorption feature as well as with the luminosity surface density of the mid-IR emitting region (Sigma_MIR), suggesting that warmer, more compact starbursts have substantially smaller [CII]/FIR ratios. Pure star-forming (SF) LIRGs have a mean [CII]/FIR ~ 4x10^-3, while galaxies with low 6.2um PAH…
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