The UV 2175{\AA} Attenuation Bump and its Correlation with PAH Emission at z~2
Irene Shivaei, Leindert Boogaard, Tanio D\'iaz-Santos, Andrew, Battisti, Jarle Brinchmann, Elisabete da Cunha, Michael Maseda, Jorryt, Matthee, Ana Monreal-Ibero, Themiya Nanayakkara, Gerg\"o Popping, Alba, Vidal-Garc\'ia, Peter M. Weilbacher

TL;DR
This study investigates the relationship between the UV 2175{ A} attenuation bump and PAH emission in galaxies at z~2, revealing correlations with stellar mass and metallicity that suggest PAH carriers influence the UV bump.
Contribution
It demonstrates a strong correlation between the UV bump strength and PAH emission, linking dust features to galaxy metallicity and mass at high redshift.
Findings
UV bump strength correlates with PAH emission.
UV bump is weaker in low-mass, low-metallicity galaxies.
Bump strength increases with stellar mass at fixed SFR.
Abstract
The UV bump is a broad absorption feature centered at 2175{\AA} that is seen in the attenuation/extinction curve of some galaxies, but its origin is not well known. Here, we use a sample of 86 star-forming galaxies at z=1.7-2.7 with deep rest-frame UV spectroscopy from the MUSE HUDF Survey to study the connection between the strength of the observed UV 2175{\AA} bump and the Spitzer/MIPS 24 micron photometry, which at the redshift range of our sample probes mid-IR polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH) emission at ~6-8 micron. The sample has robust spectroscopic redshifts and consists of typical main-sequence galaxies with a wide range in stellar mass (log(Mstar/Msun) ~ 8.5-10.7) and star formation rates (SFRs; SFR ~ 1-100 Msun/yr). Galaxies with MIPS detections have strong UV bumps, except for those with mass-weighted ages younger than ~150 Myr. We find that the UV bump amplitude does…
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.
