Diffuse Interstellar Bands and the Ultraviolet Extinction Curves: The Missing Link Revisited
F.Y. Xiang, Aigen Li, J.X. Zhong (University of Missouri/Xiangtan, University)

TL;DR
This study investigates the potential relationship between diffuse interstellar bands (DIBs) and ultraviolet extinction curves, finding no significant correlation, thus constraining the possible carriers of DIBs.
Contribution
The paper re-examines the connection between UV extinction features and DIBs using a decomposition method, providing a more consistent analysis and confirming the lack of correlation.
Findings
No correlation between far-UV extinction and most DIBs.
Color excess E(1300-1700) does not correlate with DIBs.
No correlation between the 2175 Å bump and DIBs or far-UV extinction.
Abstract
A large number of interstellar absorption features at ~ 4000\AA\ -- 1.8 {\mu}m, known as the "diffuse interstellar bands" (DIBs), remains unidentified. Most recent works relate them to large polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH) molecules or ultrasmall carbonaceous grains which are also thought to be responsible for the 2175 \AA\ extinction bump and/or the far ultraviolet (UV) extinction rise at . Therefore, one might expect some relation between the UV extinction and DIBs. Such a relationship, if established, could put important constraints on the carrier of DIBs. Over the past four decades, whether DIBs are related to the shape of the UV extinction curves has been extensively investigated. However, the results are often inconsistent, partly due to the inconsistencies in characterizing the UV extinction. Here we re-examine the connection between the UV…
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