Revisiting Attenuation Curves: the Case of NGC 3351
Daniela Calzetti (1), Andrew J. Battisti (2), Irene Shivaei (3,4),, Matteo Messa (5,6), Michele Cignoni (7,8), Angela Adamo (6), Daniel A. Dale, (9), John S. Gallagher (10), Kathryn Grasha (2), Eva K. Grebel (11), Robert, C. Kennicutt (4,12), Sean T. Linden (1), Goran Ostlin (6)

TL;DR
This study analyzes multi-wavelength data of NGC 3351's central region to understand its dust attenuation properties, revealing complex stellar populations and a unique attenuation curve that explains its deviation from typical IRX-beta relations.
Contribution
It provides a detailed modeling of the dust attenuation curve and stellar populations in NGC 3351, highlighting the complexity of attenuation laws outside starburst regimes.
Findings
The intrinsic UV slope is redder due to complex star formation history.
The attenuation curve lies between starburst and SMC curves, with R'(V)=4.93.
Stellar continuum is less attenuated than ionized gas.
Abstract
Multi-wavelength images from the farUV (~0.15 micron) to the sub-millimeter of the central region of the galaxy NGC 3351 are analyzed to constrain its stellar populations and dust attenuation. Despite hosting a ~1 kpc circumnuclear starburst ring, NGC 3351 deviates from the IRX-beta relation, the relation between the infrared-to-UV luminosity ratio and the UV continuum slope (beta) that other starburst galaxies follow. To understand the reason for the deviation, we leverage the high angular resolution of archival nearUV-to-nearIR HST images to divide the ring into ~60-180 pc size regions and model each individually. We find that the UV slope of the combined intrinsic (dust-free) stellar populations in the central region is redder than what is expected for a young model population. This is due to the region's complex star formation history, which boosts the nearUV emission relative to…
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