The Stellar Spectral Features of Nearby Galaxies in the Near-Infrared: Tracers of Thermally-Pulsing Asymptotic Giant Branch Stars?
Rog\'erio Riffel, Rachel E. Mason, Lucimara P. Martins, Alberto, Rod\'iguez-Ardila, Luis C. Ho, Rogemar A. Riffel, Paulina Lira, Omaira, Gonzalez Martin, Daniel Ruschel-Dutra, Almudena Alonso-Herrero, Helene, Flohic, Richard M. McDermid, Cristina Ramos Almeida

TL;DR
This study analyzes near-infrared stellar absorption features in 12 nearby galaxies, revealing that evolved stars, especially TP-AGB stars, dominate these features, and highlights the need for improved models to accurately reproduce observed spectra.
Contribution
It provides high-quality NIR spectra of galaxy nuclei, identifies key stellar features, and benchmarks current population synthesis models against observed data.
Findings
TP-AGB stars dominate NIR spectral features.
Current models do not fully reproduce observed features.
High S/N spectra serve as a benchmark for future models.
Abstract
We analyze the stellar absorption features in high signal-to-noise ratio near-infrared (NIR) spectra of the nuclear region of 12 nearby galaxies, mostly spirals. The features detected in some or all of the galaxies in this sample are the TiO (0.843 m\ and 0.886 m), VO (1.048 m), CN (1.1 m\ and 1.4 m), HO (1.4 m\ and 1.9 m) and CO (1.6 m\ and 2.3 m) bands. The C (1.17 m\ and 1.76 m) bands are generally weak or absent, although C (1.76 m) may be weakly present in the mean galaxy spectrum. A deep feature near 0.93 m, likely caused by CN, TiO and/or ZrO, is also detected in all objects. Fitting a combination of stellar spectra to the mean spectrum shows that the absorption features are produced by evolved stars: cool giants and supergiant stars in the early- or thermally-pulsing asymptotic giant branch…
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