A Tale of Three Galaxies: Deciphering the Infrared Emission of the Spectroscopically Anomalous Galaxies IRAS F10398+1455, IRAS F21013-0739 and SDSS J0808+3948
Yanxia Xie, Aigen Li, Lei Hao, and Robert Nikutta

TL;DR
This study models the infrared spectra of three anomalous galaxies using dust mixtures, revealing that lower dust temperatures and grain sizes suggest they host young or weak AGNs, differing from typical quasars.
Contribution
It introduces a dust mixture model to explain the unique IR emission features of these galaxies, highlighting the role of dust temperature and grain size in their spectral characteristics.
Findings
Dust temperature primarily influences IR emission features.
Galaxies have lower dust temperatures (~250-400K) than quasars (~640K).
Larger dust grains are more common in quasars.
Abstract
The \textit{Spitzer}/Infrared Spectrograph spectra of three spectroscopically anomalous galaxies (IRAS~F10398+1455, IRAS~F21013-0739 and SDSS~J0808+3948) are modeled in terms of a mixture of warm and cold silicate dust, and warm and cold carbon dust. Their unique infrared (IR) emission spectra are characterized by a steep 5--8 emission continuum, strong emission bands from polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH) molecules, and prominent silicate emission. The steep 5--8 emission continuum and strong PAH emission features suggest the dominance of starbursts, while the silicate emission is indicative of significant heating from active galactic nuclei (AGNs). With warm and cold silicate dust of various compositions ("astronomical silicate," amorphous olivine, or amorphous pyroxene) combined with warm and cold carbon dust (amorphous carbon, or graphite), we are…
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