An Updated Dust-to-Star Geometry: Dust Attenuation Does Not Depend on Inclination in $1.3\leq z\leq 2.6$ Star-Forming Galaxies from MOSDEF
Brian Lorenz, Mariska Kriek, Alice E. Shapley, Naveen A. Reddy, Ryan, L. Sanders, Guillermo Barro, Alison L. Coil, Bahram Mobasher, Sedona H., Price, Jordan N. Runco, Irene Shivaei, Brian Siana, Daniel R. Weisz

TL;DR
This study reveals that dust attenuation in star-forming galaxies at redshifts 1.3 to 2.6 is primarily driven by galaxy mass and is independent of inclination, challenging previous assumptions about viewing angle effects.
Contribution
It introduces a three-component dust model where attenuation mainly occurs in star-forming regions and clumps, with minimal diffuse ISM contribution, and links dust attenuation to galaxy mass through metallicity regulation.
Findings
Dust properties do not vary with galaxy inclination.
Attenuation increases with galaxy mass, independent of SFR or metallicity.
Nebular emission is more attenuated than stellar emission, especially in massive galaxies.
Abstract
We investigate dust attenuation and its dependence on viewing angle for 308 star-forming galaxies at from the MOSFIRE Deep Evolution Field (MOSDEF) survey. We divide galaxies with a detected H emission line and coverage of H into eight groups by stellar mass, star formation rate (SFR), and inclination (i.e., axis ratio), then stack their spectra. From each stack, we measure Balmer decrement and gas-phase metallicity, then we compute median \AV and UV continuum spectral slope (). First, we find that none of the dust properties (Balmer decrement, \AV, ) vary with axis ratio. Second, both stellar and nebular attenuation increase with increasing galaxy mass, showing little residual dependence on SFR or metallicity. Third, nebular emission is more attenuated than stellar emission, and this difference grows even larger at higher galaxy masses…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
