4.6 Article

The dust distribution in edge-on galaxies -: Radiative transfer fits of V and K′-band images

Journal

ASTRONOMY & ASTROPHYSICS
Volume 471, Issue 3, Pages 765-U38

Publisher

EDP SCIENCES S A
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:20077649

Keywords

dust, extinction; galaxies : ISM; galaxies : stellar content; galaxies : spiral

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Aims. I have analyzed a sample of seven nearby edge-on galaxies observed in the V and K'-bands, in order to infer the properties of the dust distribution. Methods. A radiative transfer model, including scattering, was used to decompose each image into a stellar disk, a bulge, and a dust disk. The parameters describing the distributions were obtained through standard chi(2) minimization techniques. Results. The dust disks fitted to the V-band images are consistent with previous work in the literature: the radial scalelength of dust is larger than for stars (hd/hs similar to 1.5); the dust disk has a smaller vertical scalelength than the stellar (zd/zs similar to 1/3); the dust disk is almost transparent when seen face-on ( central, face-on, optical depth tau 0 = 0.5- 1.5). Equivalent fits can be produced using faster radiative transfer models that neglect scattering. In the K'-band, no trace is found of a second, massive, dust disk, which has been invoked to explain observations of dust emission in the submillimeter. I discuss the model degeneracies and the effect of complex structures on the fitted distributions. In particular, most bulges in the sample show a box/peanuts morphology with large residuals; two lower-inclination galaxies show a dust ring distribution, which could be the cause of the large, fitted, dust scalelengths.

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