The Opacity of Spiral Galaxy Disks VI: Extinction, stellar light and color
B. W. Holwerda (1,2), R. A. Gonz\'alez (3), P. C. van der Kruit (2), and Ronald J. Allen (1)

TL;DR
This study investigates how dust extinction affects the observed light and color in spiral galaxy disks, using the Synthetic Field Method and comparing extinction profiles with surface brightness, color, and stellar light distribution.
Contribution
It demonstrates the relationship between dust opacity and surface brightness, and compares extinction measurements from galaxy counts with Cepheid reddening, revealing dust distribution characteristics.
Findings
Opacity correlates with surface brightness at higher brightness levels.
No strong correlation between near-infrared color and extinction.
Dust distribution is more extended than stellar light.
Abstract
In this paper we explore the relation between dust extinction and stellar light distribution in disks of spiral galaxies. Extinction influences our dynamical and photometric perception of disks, since it can distort our measurement of the contribution of the stellar component. To characterize the total extinction by a foreground disk, Gonzalez et al. (1998) proposed the ``Synthetic Field Method'' (SFM), which uses the calibrated number of distant galaxies seen through the foreground disk as a direct indication of extinction. The method is described in Gonzalez et al. (1998) and Holwerda et al. (2005a). To obtain good statistics, the method was applied to a set of HST/WFPC2 fields Holwerda et al. (2005b) and radial extinction profiles were derived, based on these counts. In the present paper, we explore the relation of opacity with surface brightness or color from 2MASS images, as well…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies
