The dust-star interplay in late-type galaxies at z < 0.5: forecasts for the JWST
Ciro Pappalardo (IA-FCUL, Lisbon), George J. Bendo, Mederic Boquien,, Maarten Baes, Sebastien Viaene, Simone Bianchi, Jacopo Fritz

TL;DR
This paper examines the relationship between dust and star formation in late-type galaxies at z < 0.5, assessing JWST's potential to explore these correlations in the early Universe through spectral energy distribution analysis and detection rate predictions.
Contribution
It provides new insights into dust-star correlations, their scatter, and forecasts JWST's capabilities to detect and analyze such relations at high redshifts.
Findings
Strong correlation between dust luminosity and SFR, with increased scatter at low SFR.
UV extinction reduces data dispersion in dust-star relation.
Detection rates of galaxies at high redshift depend on SFR and stellar mass, with significant drops at z=8.
Abstract
In recent years, significant growth in the amount of data available to astronomers has opened up the possibility to uncover fundamental correlations, linking the dust component of a galaxy to its star formation rate (SFR). In this paper, we re-examine these correlations, investigating the origin of the observed scatter, and the ability of the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) to explore such relations in the early Universe. We defined a sample of about 800 normal star-forming galaxies with photometries in the range of 0.15 < < 500 microns and analysed them with different spectral energy distribution (SED) fitting methods. With the SEDs extracted, we investigated the detection rate at different redshifts with the MId-Infrared instruments (MIRI) onboard the JWST. Dust luminosity (L) and SFR show a strong correlation, but for SFR < 2 M yr, the correlation…
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