Mid-infrared spectroscopy of the Andromeda galaxy
D. Hemachandra (1), P.Barmby (1), E. Peeters (1, 2), S.P. Willner, (3), M.L.N. Ashby (3), H.A. Smith (3), K.D. Gordon (4), D.A. Smith (4), G.G., Fazio (3) ((1) University of Western Ontario, (2) SETI Institute, (3),, Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics

TL;DR
This study uses mid-infrared spectroscopy to analyze the spatial distribution and properties of PAH features, silicate emission, and other spectral lines across different regions of the Andromeda galaxy, revealing variations linked to local conditions.
Contribution
First detailed mid-infrared spectral mapping of multiple regions in Andromeda, highlighting spatial variations in PAH and silicate features and resolving previous background subtraction issues.
Findings
PAH feature ratios correlate across regions except the nucleus.
The nucleus shows silicate emission but no PAH emission.
Distinct spatial distributions of spectral features in the nuclear region.
Abstract
We present Spitzer/Infrared Spectrograph (IRS) 5-21 micron spectroscopic maps towards 12 regions in the Andromeda galaxy (M31). These regions include the nucleus, bulge, an active region in the star-forming ring, and 9 other regions chosen to cover a range of mid-to-far-infrared colours. In line with previous results, PAH feature ratios (6.2 micron and 7.7 micron features compared to the 11.2 micron feature) measured from our extracted M31 spectra, except the nucleus, strongly correlate. The equivalent widths of the main PAH features, as a function of metallicity and radiation hardness, are consistent with those observed for other nearby spiral and starburst galaxies. Reprocessed data from the ISOCAM instrument on the Infrared Space Observatory agree with the IRS data; early reports of suppressed 6-8 micron features and enhanced 11.3 micron feature intensity and FWHM apparently resulted…
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