Polyaromatic disordered carbon grains as carriers of the UV bump: FUV to mid-infrared spectroscopy of laboratory analogs
Lisseth Gavilan, Kim Cuong Le, Thomas Pino, Ivan Alata, Alexandre, Giuliani, Emmanuel Dartois

TL;DR
This study investigates laboratory analogs of interstellar carbonaceous dust across multiple wavelengths, revealing correlations between optical gaps, electronic transition peaks, and infrared features to better understand the carriers of the UV bump.
Contribution
It provides new laboratory spectral data and correlations linking optical and infrared features to the structure of carbonaceous dust, advancing understanding of interstellar extinction carriers.
Findings
Correlation between optical gap and π-π* transition peak position
Infrared bands linked to aromatic and aliphatic carbon features
Different infrared band classes associated with UV bump carriers
Abstract
A multiwavelength study of laboratory carbons with varying degrees of hydrogenation and sp hybridization is required to characterize the structure of the carbonaceous carriers of interstellar and circumstellar extinction. Analogs to carbonaceous interstellar dust encountered in various phases of the interstellar medium have been prepared in the laboratory. Thin films have been measured in transmission in the vacuum ultraviolet (VUV; 120 - 210 nm) within the atmospheric pressure experiment (APEX) chamber of the DISCO beam line at the SOLEIL synchrotron radiation facility. Spectra of these films were further measured through the UV-Vis (210 nm - 1 m) and in the mid-infrared (3 - 15 m). Tauc optical gaps, E, are derived from the visible spectra. The major spectral features are fitted through the VUV to the mid infrared to obtain positions, full-widths at half maximum…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
