The AKARI 2.5-5 Micron Spectra of Luminous Infrared Galaxies in the Local Universe
H. Inami, L. Armus, H. Matsuhara, V. Charmandaris, T. Diaz-Santos, J., Surace, S. Stierwalt, Y. Ohyama, J. Howell, J. Marshall, A. S. Evans, S. T., Linden, J. Mazzarella

TL;DR
This study analyzes AKARI 2.5-5 micron spectra of 145 local luminous infrared galaxies to compare PAH features and develop improved starburst/AGN diagnostics, with implications for JWST observations.
Contribution
It introduces a revised diagnostic diagram for SB/AGN classification using 2-5 micron data and compares PAH features across different indicators, enhancing understanding of galaxy activity.
Findings
3.3 and 6.2 micron PAH EQWs do not correlate linearly.
At least one-third of AGN-classified galaxies by 3.3um PAH are starbursts by 6.2um PAH.
Bluer continuum slopes indicate stellar-dominated emission in some galaxies.
Abstract
We present AKARI 2.5-5um spectra of 145 local luminous infrared galaxies in the Great Observatories All-sky LIRG Survey. In all of the spectra, we measure the line fluxes and EQWs of the polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH) at 3.3um and the hydrogen recombination line Br-alpha, with apertures matched to the slit sizes of the Spitzer spectrograph and with an aperture covering ~95% of the total flux in the AKARI 2D spectra. The star formation rates (SFRs) derived from Br-alpha measured in the latter aperture agree well with SFRs(LIR), when the dust extinction correction is adopted based on the 9.7um absorption feature. Together with the Spitzer spectra, we are able to compare the 3.3 and 6.2um PAH features, the two most commonly used near/mid-IR indicators of starburst (SB) or active galactic nucleus (AGN) dominated galaxies. We find that the 3.3 and 6.2um PAH EQWs do not follow a linear…
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