Expanded Sample of Small Magellanic Cloud Ultraviolet Dust Extinction Curves: Correlations between the 2175 A bump, q_pah, UV extinction shape, and N(HI)/A(V)
Karl D. Gordon, E. L. Fitzpatrick, Derck Massa, Ralph Bohlin, Jeremy, Chastenet, Claire E. Murray, Geoffrey C. Clayton, Daniel J. Lennon, Karl A., Misselt, and Karin Sandstrom

TL;DR
This study expands the sample of Small Magellanic Cloud UV dust extinction curves, revealing diverse features and correlations with dust properties, and confirms the link between the 2175 A bump and PAH emission.
Contribution
It provides a larger, more comprehensive analysis of SMC UV extinction curves, identifying correlations with dust characteristics and testing the origin of the 2175 A bump.
Findings
16 sightlines with steep, bumpless extinction curves
The 2175 A bump correlates with PAH emission features
UV extinction slope correlates with N(HI)/A(V)
Abstract
The Small Magellanic Cloud (SMC) shows a large variation in ultraviolet (UV) dust extinction curves, ranging from Milky Way-like (MW) to significantly steeper curves with no detectable 2175 A bump. This result is based on a sample of only nine sightlines. From HST/STIS and IUE spectra of OB stars, we have measured UV extinction curves along 32 SMC sightlines where eight of these curves were published previously. We find 16 sightlines with steep extinction with no detectable 2175 A bump, four sightlines with MW-like extinction with a detectable 2175 A bump, two sightlines with fairly flat UV extinction and weak/absent 2175 A bumps, and 10 sightlines with unreliable curves due to low SMC dust columns. Our expanded sample shows that the sightlines with and without the 2175 A bump are located throughout the SMC and not limited to specific regions. The average extinction curve of the 16…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSpace Exploration and Technology · Atmospheric Ozone and Climate
