The average dust attenuation curve at z~1.3 based on HST grism surveys
A. J. Battisti, M. B. Bagley, I. Baronchelli, Y.-S. Dai, A. L. Henry,, M. A. Malkan, A. Alavi, D. Calzetti, J. Colbert, P. J. McCarthy, V. Mehta, M., Rafelski, C. Scarlata, I. Shivaei, E. Wisnioski

TL;DR
This study characterizes the average dust attenuation curve at redshift ~1.3 using HST grism data, revealing its intermediate properties between local and high-redshift galaxies and suggesting a mild evolution of dust features over cosmic time.
Contribution
First characterization of the dust attenuation curve at z~1.3 combining UV to IR photometry with Balmer decrement constraints, and development of methods applicable to future large surveys.
Findings
Attenuation curve slope and normalization are intermediate between z=0 and z~2.
The 2175 Å feature is present with similar strength to other studies up to z~3.
Methods enable dust attenuation analysis from low-resolution grism data for future missions.
Abstract
We present the first characterisation of the average dust attenuation curve at by combining rest-frame ultraviolet through near-IR photometry with Balmer decrement (/) constraints for 900 galaxies with at in the HST WFC3 IR Spectroscopic Parallel (WISP) and 3D-HST grism surveys. Using galaxies in SDSS, we establish that the (+[NII])/[OIII] line ratio and stellar mass are good proxies for the Balmer decrement in low-spectral resolution grism data when only upper-limits on are available and/or is blended with [NII]. The slope of the attenuation curve () and its normalization () lie in-between the values found for and dust attenuation curves derived with similar methods.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Adaptive optics and wavefront sensing
