Evidence for Shallow Nebular Attenuation Curves and Patchy Dust Geometry at z~2 with Pa-beta/H-alpha Measurements from JWST-MegaScience Medium Band Photometry
Brian Lorenz, Katherine A. Suess, Mariska Kriek, Sedona H. Price, Joel Leja, Hakim Atek, Abhiyan Barailee, Rachel Bezanson, Gabriel Brammer, Sam E. Cutler, Pratika Dayal, Anna de Graaf, Jenny E. Greene, Lukas J. Furtak, Ivo Labbe, Danilo Marchesini, Michael V. Maseda

TL;DR
This study uses JWST medium-band photometry to analyze nebular attenuation and dust geometry in star-forming galaxies at z~2, revealing shallow attenuation curves and patchy dust distribution, especially in massive galaxies.
Contribution
It provides the first large sample evidence that shallow nebular attenuation curves better describe dust effects at z~2, indicating patchy dust geometry in star-forming galaxies.
Findings
Shallow attenuation curve fits observed data better than traditional models.
Dust covering fraction is low and varies across galaxy regions.
Massive galaxies show stronger dust attenuation and patchy dust distribution.
Abstract
We constrain the nebular attenuation curve and investigate dust geometry in star-forming galaxies at cosmic noon using photometric medium-band emission line measurements. We measure H-alpha emission line fluxes for a sample of 209 star-forming galaxies at 1.2<z<2.4 in MegaScience/UNCOVER with stellar masses spanning . For 66 of these galaxies, we also measure a Pa-beta flux. We find that the Pa-beta/H-alpha line ratio increases strongly with stellar mass and star-formation rate (SFR) across our full mass range, indicating that more massive galaxies are dustier. We compare our results with a mass-, SFR-, and redshift-matched sample of galaxies from the MOSDEF survey with spectroscopic measurements of H-alpha/H-beta, finding that a shallow Reddy et al. (2025) nebular attenuation curve is more consistent with our observations than the typically assumed…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
