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Spitzer Mid-Infrared Spectroscopy of Infrared Luminous Galaxies at z~2. II. Diagnostics

Authors :
Sajina, Anna
Yan, Lin
Armus, Lee
Choi, Philip
Fadda, Dario
Helou, George
Spoon, Henrik
Source :
The Astrophysical Journal; August 2007, Vol. 664 Issue: 2 p713-737, 25p
Publication Year :
2007

Abstract

We present mid-IR spectral decomposition of a sample of 48 Spitzer-selected ULIRGs spanning z ~ 1-3 and likely LIR ~ 1012-1013 L. Our study aims at quantifying the star formation and active galactic nucleus (AGN) processes in these sources that recent results suggest have evolved strongly between the observed epoch and today. To do this, we study the mid-IR contribution of PAH emission, continuum, and extinction. About img1.gif of our sample are continuum (i.e., AGN) dominated sources, but ~60% of these show PAH emission, suggesting the presence of star formation activity. These sources have redder mid-IR colors than typical optically selected quasars. About 25% of our sample have strong PAH emission, but none are likely to be pure starbursts as reflected in their relatively high 5 mm hot dust continua. However, their steep 30-14 mm slopes suggest that star formation might dominate the total infrared luminosity. Six of our z ~ 2 sources have EW6.2 [?] 0.3 mm and L14 mm [?] 1012 L (implying LIR [?] 1013 L). At these luminosities, such high EW6.2 ULIRGs do not exist in the local universe. We find a median optical depth at 9.7 mm of [?]t9.7 mm[?] = 1.4. This is consistent with local IRAS-selected ULIRGs but differs from early results on SCUBA-selected z ~ 2 ULIRGs. Similar to local ULIRGs, about 25% of our sample shows extreme obscuration (t9.7 mm [?] 3), suggesting buried nuclei. In general, we find that our sources are similar to local ULIRGs but are an order of magnitude more luminous. It is not clear whether our z ~ 2 ULIRGs are simply scaled-up versions of local ULIRGs or subject to fundamentally different physical processes.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0004637X and 15384357
Volume :
664
Issue :
2
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
The Astrophysical Journal
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
ejs18565661