What shapes the far-infrared spectral energy distributions of galaxies?
Mohammadtaher Safarzadeh (Johns Hopkins), Christopher C. Hayward, (Caltech), Henry C. Ferguson (STScI), Rachel S. Somerville (Rutgers)

TL;DR
This study uses hydrodynamical galaxy simulations and PCA to identify key physical properties, mainly IR luminosity and dust mass, that shape the far-infrared spectral energy distributions of galaxies across different redshifts.
Contribution
It introduces a two-parameter set of FIR SED templates based on IR luminosity and dust mass, clarifying the physical drivers of SED variation.
Findings
97% of SED variance explained by two principal components
FIR SED shape primarily determined by IR luminosity and dust mass
Redshift evolution in dust temperature linked to dust mass, not galaxy size
Abstract
To explore the connection between the global physical properties of galaxies and their far-infrared (FIR) spectral energy distributions (SEDs), we study the variation in the FIR SEDs of a set of hydrodynamically simulated galaxies that are generated by performing dust radiative transfer in post-processing. Our sample includes both isolated and merging systems at various stages of the merging process and covers infrared (IR) luminosities and dust masses that are representative of both low- and high-redshift galaxies. We study the FIR SEDs using principle component analysis (PCA) and find that 97\% of the variance in the sample can be explained by two principle components (PCs). The first PC characterizes the wavelength of the peak of the FIR SED, and the second encodes the breadth of the SED. We find that the coefficients of both PCs can be predicted well using a double power law in…
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