Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon excitation in nearby spiral galaxies
G. J. Bendo, N. Lu, A. Zijlstra

TL;DR
This study investigates how polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) are excited in nearby spiral galaxies, revealing complex dependencies on star formation, stellar populations, and galaxy morphology, impacting their use as star formation tracers.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of PAH excitation mechanisms across different galaxy types and environments, highlighting the heterogeneity and complexity involved.
Findings
PAH excitation linked to star formation in some galaxies
Evolved stars can also excite PAHs in certain cases
PAH/dust ratios generally not correlated with metallicity gradients
Abstract
We have examined polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH) excitation in a sample of 25 nearby face-on spiral galaxies using the ratio of mid-infrared PAH emission to dust mass. Within 11 of the galaxies, we found that the PAH excitation was straightforwardly linked to ultraviolet or mid-infrared star formation tracers, which, along with other results studying the relation of PAH emission to star formation, indicates that the PAHs are most strongly excited in dusty shells around the star forming regions. Within another 5 galaxies, the PAH emission is enhanced around star forming regions only at specific galactocentric radii. In 6 more galaxies, PAH excitation is more strongly correlated with the evolved stellar populations as traced by 3.6 micron emission. The results for the remaining 3 galaxies were ambiguous. The radial gradients of the PAH/dust ratios were generally not linked to…
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