Far-infrared Fine-Structure Line Diagnostics of Ultraluminous Infrared Galaxies
Duncan Farrah, Vianney Lebouteiller, Henrik Spoon, Jeronimo, Bernard-Salas, Chris Pearson, Dimitra Rigopoulou, Howard Smith, Eduardo, Gonzalez-Alfonso, David Clements, Andreas Efstathiou, Diane Cormier, Jose, Afonso, Sara Petty, Kathryn Harris, Peter Hurley, Colin Borys

TL;DR
This study uses Herschel observations to analyze fine-structure lines in ultraluminous infrared galaxies, revealing line deficits, their possible causes, and how these lines relate to star formation and galaxy properties.
Contribution
It provides new relations between far-IR line luminosities and star formation rates, and assesses the impact of dust and AGN activity on these diagnostics.
Findings
[N II] and [O I] lines are good tracers of IR luminosity and star formation.
[C II] is a poor tracer of IR luminosity and star formation rate.
Line deficits are linked to dustier H II regions and possibly charged dust grains.
Abstract
We present Herschel observations of six fine-structure lines in 25 Ultraluminous Infrared Galaxies at z<0.27. The lines, [O III]52, [N III]57, [O I]63, [N II]122, [O I]145, and [C II]158, are mostly single gaussians with widths <600 km s-1 and luminosities of 10^7 - 10^9 Solar. There are deficits in the [O I]63/L_IR, [N II]/L_IR, [O I]145/L_IR, and [C II]/L_IR ratios compared to lower luminosity systems. The majority of the line deficits are consistent with dustier H II regions, but part of the [C II] deficit may arise from an additional mechanism, plausibly charged dust grains. This is consistent with some of the [C II] originating from PDRs or the ISM. We derive relations between far-IR line luminosities and both IR luminosity and star formation rate. We find that [N II] and both [O I] lines are good tracers of IR luminosity and star formation rate. In contrast, [C II] is a poor…
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