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Featured researches published by G. Helou.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2007

The calibration of mid-infrared star formation rate indicators

D. Calzetti; Robert C. Kennicutt; C. W. Engelbracht; Claus Leitherer; B. T. Draine; Lisa J. Kewley; John Moustakas; Megan L. Sosey; Daniel A. Dale; Karl D. Gordon; G. Helou; David J. Hollenbach; Lee Armus; G. J. Bendo; Caroline Bot; Brent Alan Buckalew; T. H. Jarrett; Aigen Li; Martin Meyer; E. J. Murphy; Moire K. M. Prescott; Michael W. Regan; G. H. Rieke; Helene Roussel; Kartik Sheth; J. D. Smith; Michele D. Thornley; F. Walter

With the goal of investigating the degree to which the MIR emission traces the SFR, we analyze Spitzer 8 and 24 μm data of star-forming regions in a sample of 33 nearby galaxies with available HST NICMOS images in the Paα (1.8756 μm) emission line. The galaxies are drawn from the SINGS sample and cover a range of morphologies and a factor ~10 in oxygen abundance. Published data on local low-metallicity starburst galaxies and LIRGs are also included in the analysis. Both the stellar continuum-subtracted 8 μm emission and the 24 μm emission correlate with the extinction-corrected Paα line emission, although neither relationship is linear. Simple models of stellar populations and dust extinction and emission are able to reproduce the observed nonlinear trend of the 24 μm emission versus number of ionizing photons, including the modest deficiency of 24 μm emission in the low-metallicity regions, which results from a combination of decreasing dust opacity and dust temperature at low luminosities. Conversely, the trend of the 8 μm emission as a function of the number of ionizing photons is not well reproduced by the same models. The 8 μm emission is contributed, in larger measure than the 24 μm emission, by dust heated by nonionizing stellar populations, in addition to the ionizing ones, in agreement with previous findings. Two SFR calibrations, one using the 24 μm emission and the other using a combination of the 24 μm and Hα luminosities (Kennicutt and coworkers), are presented. No calibration is presented for the 8 μm emission because of its significant dependence on both metallicity and environment. The calibrations presented here should be directly applicable to systems dominated by ongoing star formation.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2007

THE MID-INFRARED SPECTRUM OF STAR-FORMING GALAXIES: GLOBAL PROPERTIES OF POLYCYCLIC AROMATIC HYDROCARBON EMISSION

J.-D. T. Smith; B. T. Draine; Daniel A. Dale; John Moustakas; Robert C. Kennicutt; G. Helou; Lee Armus; Helene Roussel; K. Sheth; G. J. Bendo; Brent Alan Buckalew; Daniela Calzetti; C. W. Engelbracht; Karl D. Gordon; David J. Hollenbach; Aigen Li; Sangeeta Malhotra; E. J. Murphy; F. Walter

We present a sample of low-resolution 5-38 μm Spitzer IRS spectra of the inner few square kiloparsecs of 59 nearby galaxies spanning a large range of star formation properties. A robust method for decomposing mid-infrared galaxy spectra is described and used to explore the behavior of PAH emission and the prevalence of silicate dust extinction. Evidence for silicate extinction is found in ~1/8 of the sample, at strengths that indicate that most normal galaxies undergo A_V ≲ 3 mag averaged over their centers. The contribution of PAH emission to the total infrared power is found to peak near 10% and extend up to ~20% and is suppressed at metallicities Z ≲ Z_☉/4, as well as in low-luminosity AGN environments. Strong interband PAH feature strength variations (2-5 times) are observed, with the presence of a weak AGN and, to a lesser degree, increasing metallicity shifting power to the longer wavelength bands. A peculiar PAH emission spectrum with markedly diminished 5-8 μm features arises among the sample solely in systems with relatively hard radiation fields harboring low-luminosity AGNs. The AGNs may modify the emitting grain distribution and provide the direct excitation source of the unusual PAH emission, which cautions against using absolute PAH strength to estimate star formation rates in systems harboring active nuclei. Alternatively, the low star formation intensity often associated with weak AGNs may affect the spectrum. The effect of variations in the mid-infrared spectrum on broadband infrared surveys is modeled and points to more than a factor of 2 uncertainty in results that assume a fixed PAH emission spectrum, for redshifts z = 0-2.5.


The Astrophysical Journal | 1985

Thermal infrared and nonthermal radio - Remarkable correlation in disks of galaxies

G. Helou; B. T. Soifer; Michael Rowan-Robinson

A tight, linear correlation is established between the far-infrared flux measured by IRAS and the nonthermal radio flux density (at 1.4 GHz) from disks of spiral galaxies. This correlation defines a ratio of infrared to radio fluxes that is characteristic of star formation activity. Galaxies with nuclear starbursts seem to follow the correlation. If the far-infrared is reradiated luminosity from young massive stars, then the supernova remnants alone account for less than 10 percent of the radio emission. These results indicate a close coupling between dust heating and cosmic-ray generation and confinement in a wide range of conditions. 32 references.


Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series | 2004

Obscured and unobscured active galactic nuclei in the Spitzer Space Telescope First Look Survey

Mark Lacy; Lisa J. Storrie-Lombardi; Anna Sajina; P. N. Appleton; Lee Armus; S. C. Chapman; P. I. Choi; D. Fadda; F. Fang; D. T. Frayer; I. Heinrichsen; G. Helou; Myungshin Im; Francine Roxanne Marleau; Frank J. Masci; D. L. Shupe; B. T. Soifer; Jason A. Surace; Harry I. Teplitz; G. Wilson; Lin Yan

Selection of active galactic nuclei (AGNs) in the infrared facilitates the discovery of AGNs whose optical emission is extinguished by dust. In this paper, we use the Spitzer Space Telescope First Look Survey (FLS) to assess the fraction of AGNs with mid-infrared (MIR) luminosities that are comparable to quasars and that are missed in optical quasar surveys because of dust obscuration. We begin by using the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) database to identify 54 quasars within the 4 deg^2 extragalactic FLS. These quasars occupy a distinct region in MIR color space by virtue of their strong, red continua. This has allowed us to define an MIR color criterion for selecting AGN candidates. About 2000 FLS objects have colors that are consistent with them being AGNs, but most are much fainter in the MIR than the SDSS quasars, which typically have 8 μm flux densities S_(8.0) ~ 1 mJy. We have investigated the properties of 43 objects with S_(8.0) ≥ 1 mJy that satisfy our AGN color selection. This sample should contain both unobscured quasars as well as AGNs that are absent from the SDSS survey because of extinction in the optical. After removing 16 known quasars, three probable normal quasars, and eight spurious or confused objects from the initial sample of 43, we are left with 16 objects that are likely to be obscured quasars or luminous Seyfert 2 galaxies. This suggests that the numbers of obscured and unobscured AGNs are similar in samples selected in the MIR at S_(8.0) ~ 1 mJy.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2005

Star Formation in NGC 5194 (M51a): The Panchromatic View from GALEX to Spitzer*

Daniela Calzetti; Robert C. Kennicutt; Luciana Bianchi; David Allan Thilker; Daniel A. Dale; C. W. Engelbracht; Claus Leitherer; Martin Meyer; Megan L. Sosey; Maximilian J. Mutchler; Michael W. Regan; Michele D. Thornley; Lee Armus; G. J. Bendo; S. Boissier; A. Boselli; B. T. Draine; Karl D. Gordon; G. Helou; David J. Hollenbach; Lisa J. Kewley; Barry F. Madore; D. C. Martin; E. J. Murphy; G. H. Rieke; Marcia J. Rieke; H. Roussel; Kartik Sheth; J. D. Smith; Frederick M. Walter

(Abridged) Far ultraviolet to far infrared images of the nearby galaxy NGC5194, from Spitzer, GALEX, Hubble Space Telescope and ground--based data, are used to investigate local and global star formation, and the impact of dust extinction in HII-emitting knots. In the IR/UV-UV color plane, the NGC5194 HII knots show the same trend observed for normal star-forming galaxies, having a much larger dispersion than starburst galaxies. We identify the dispersion as due to the UV emission predominantly tracing the evolved, non-ionizing stellar population, up to ages 50-100 Myr. While in starbursts the UV light traces the current SFR, in NGC5194 it traces a combination of current and recent-past SFR. Unlike the UV emission, the monochromatic 24 micron luminosity is an accurate local SFR tracer for the HII knots in NGC5194; this suggests that the 24 micron emission carriers are mainly heated by the young, ionizing stars. However, preliminary results show that the ratio of the 24 micron emission to the SFR varies by a factor of a few from galaxy to galaxy. While also correlated with star formation, the 8 micron emission is not directly proportional to the number of ionizing photons. This confirms earlier suggestions that the carriers of the 8 micron emission are heated by more than one mechanism.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2007

An Ultraviolet-to-Radio Broadband Spectral Atlas of Nearby Galaxies

Daniel A. Dale; A. Gil de Paz; Karl D. Gordon; H. M. Hanson; Lee Armus; G. J. Bendo; Luciana Bianchi; Miwa Block; S. Boissier; A. Boselli; Brent Alan Buckalew; V. Buat; D. Burgarella; Daniela Calzetti; John M. Cannon; C. W. Engelbracht; G. Helou; David J. Hollenbach; T. H. Jarrett; Robert C. Kennicutt; Claus Leitherer; Aigen Li; Barry F. Madore; D. C. Martin; Martin Meyer; E. J. Murphy; Michael W. Regan; Helene Roussel; J. D. Smith; Megan L. Sosey

The ultraviolet-to-radio continuum spectral energy distributions are presented for all 75 galaxies in the Spitzer Infrared Nearby Galaxies Survey (SINGS). A principal component analysis of the sample shows that most of the samples spectral variations stem from two underlying components, one representative of a galaxy with a low infrared-to-ultraviolet ratio and one representative of a galaxy with a high infrared-to-ultraviolet ratio. The influence of several parameters on the infrared-to-ultraviolet ratio is studied (e.g., optical morphology, disk inclination, far-infrared color, ultraviolet spectral slope, and star formation history). Consistent with our understanding of normal star-forming galaxies, the SINGS sample of galaxies in comparison to more actively star-forming galaxies exhibits a larger dispersion in the infrared-to-ultraviolet versus ultraviolet spectral slope correlation. Early-type galaxies, exhibiting low star formation rates and high optical surface brightnesses, have the most discrepant infrared-to-ultraviolet correlation. These results suggest that the star formation history may be the dominant regulator of the broadband spectral variations between galaxies. Finally, a new discovery shows that the 24 μm morphology can be a useful tool for parameterizing the global dust temperature and ultraviolet extinction in nearby galaxies. The dust emission in dwarf/irregular galaxies is clumpy and warm accompanied by low ultraviolet extinction, while in spiral galaxies there is typically a much larger diffuse component of cooler dust and average ultraviolet extinction. For galaxies with nuclear 24 μm emission, the dust temperature and ultraviolet extinction are relatively high compared to disk galaxies.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2007

The Infrared Luminosity Function of Galaxies at Redshifts z = 1 and z ~ 2 in the GOODS Fields

K. Caputi; G. Lagache; Lin Yan; H. Dole; N. Bavouzet; E. Le Floc'h; P. I. Choi; G. Helou; Naveen A. Reddy

We present the rest-frame 8 µm LF at redshifts z = 1 and ~ 2, computed from Spitzer 24 µm–selected galaxies in the GOODS fields over an area of 291 arcmin^2. Using classification criteria based on X-ray data and IRAC colors, we identify the AGNs in our sample. The rest-frame 8 µm LFs for star-forming galaxies at redshifts z = 1 and ~ 2 have the same shape as at z ~ 0, but with a strong positive luminosity evolution. The number density of star-forming galaxies with log_(10)(vL^8_v^(µm)) > 11 increases by a factor >250 from redshift z ~ 0 to 1 and is basically the same at z = 1 and ~ 2. The resulting rest-frame 8 µm luminosity densities associated with star formation at z = 1 and ~ 2 are more than 4 and 2 times larger than at z ~ 0, respectively. We also compute the total rest-frame 8 µm LF for star-forming galaxies and AGNs at z ~ 2 and show that AGNs dominate its bright end, which is well described by a power law. Using a new calibration based on Spitzer star-forming galaxies at 0 < z < 0.6 and validated at higher redshifts through stacking analysis, we compute the bolometric IR LF for star-forming galaxies at z = 1 and ~ 2. We find that the respective bolometric IR luminosity densities are (1.2 ± 0.2) × 10^9 and (6.6^(+1.2)_(-1.0)) × 10^8 L_⊙ Mpc^(-3), in agreement with previous studies within the error bars. At z ~ 2, around 90% of the IR luminosity density associated with star formation is produced by luminous and ultraluminous IR galaxies, with the two populations contributing in roughly similar amounts. Finally, we discuss the consistency of our findings with other existing observational results on galaxy evolution.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2001

Far-infrared spectroscopy of normal galaxies: Physical conditions in the interstellar medium

Sangeeta Malhotra; Michael J. Kaufman; David J. Hollenbach; G. Helou; Robert H. Rubin; James R. Brauher; Daniel A. Dale; N. Lu; S. Lord; Gordon J. Stacey; Alessandra Contursi; Deidre A. Hunter; Harriet L. Dinerstein

The most important cooling lines of the neutral interstellar medium (ISM) lie in the far-infrared (FIR). We present measurements by the Infrared Space Observatory Long Wavelength Spectrometer of seven lines from neutral and ionized ISM of 60 normal, star-forming galaxies. The galaxy sample spans a range in properties such as morphology, FIR colors (indicating dust temperature), and FIR/blue ratios (indicating star formation activity and optical depth). In two-thirds of the galaxies in this sample, the [C II] line flux is proportional to FIR dust continuum. The other one-third show a smooth decline in L[C II]/LFIR with increasing Fν(60 μm)/Fν(100 μm) and LFIR/LB, spanning a range of a factor of more than 50. Two galaxies at the warm and active extreme of the range have L[C II]/LFIR < 2 × 10-4 (3 σ upper limit). This is due to increased positive grain charge in the warmer and more active galaxies, which leads to less efficient heating by photoelectrons from dust grains. The ratio of the two principal photodissociation region (PDR) cooling lines L[O I]/L[C II] shows a tight correlation with Fν(60 μm)/Fν(100 μm), indicating that both gas and dust temperatures increase together. We derive a theoretical scaling between [N II] (122 μm) and [C II] from ionized gas and use it to separate [C II] emission from neutral PDRs and ionized gas. Comparison of PDR models of Kaufman et al. with observed ratios of (1) L[O I]/L[C II] and (L[C II] + L[O I])/LFIR and (2) L[O I]/LFIR and Fν(60 μm)/Fν(100 μm) yields far-UV flux G0 and gas density n. The G0 and n values estimated from the two methods agree to better than a factor of 2 and 1.5, respectively, in more than half the sources. The derived G0 and n correlate with each other, and G0 increases with n as G0 ∝ nα, where α ≈ 1.4 . We interpret this correlation as arising from Stromgren sphere scalings if much of the line and continuum luminosity arises near star-forming regions. The high values of PDR surface temperature (270-900 K) and pressure (6 × 104-1.5 × 107 K cm-3) derived also support the view that a significant part of grain and gas heating in the galaxies occurs very close to star-forming regions. The differences in G0 and n from galaxy to galaxy may be due to differences in the physical properties of the star-forming clouds. Galaxies with higher G0 and n have larger and/or denser star-forming clouds.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2011

CALIBRATING EXTINCTION-FREE STAR FORMATION RATE DIAGNOSTICS WITH 33 GHz FREE-FREE EMISSION IN NGC 6946

E. J. Murphy; J. J. Condon; E. Schinnerer; Robert C. Kennicutt; D. Calzetti; Lee Armus; G. Helou; Jean L. Turner; G. Aniano; P. Beirão; Alberto D. Bolatto; Bernhard R. Brandl; Kevin V. Croxall; Daniel A. Dale; J. Donovan Meyer; B. T. Draine; C. W. Engelbracht; L. K. Hunt; Cai-Na Hao; Jin Koda; H. Roussel; Ramin A. Skibba; J.-D. T. Smith

Using free-free emission measured in the Ka band (26-40 GHz) for 10 star-forming regions in the nearby galaxy NGC 6946, including its starbursting nucleus, we compare a number of star formation rate (SFR) diagnostics that are typically considered to be unaffected by interstellar extinction. These diagnostics include non-thermal radio (i.e., 1.4 GHz), total infrared (IR; 8-1000 μm), and warm dust (i.e., 24 μm) emission, along with hybrid indicators that attempt to account for obscured and unobscured emission from star-forming regions including Hα + 24 μm and UV + IR measurements. The assumption is made that the 33 GHz free-free emission provides the most accurate measure of the current SFR. Among the extranuclear star-forming regions, the 24 μm, Hα + 24 μm, and UV + IR SFR calibrations are in good agreement with the 33 GHz free-free SFRs. However, each of the SFR calibrations relying on some form of dust emission overestimates the nuclear SFR by a factor of ~2 relative to the 33 GHz free-free SFR. This is more likely the result of excess dust heating through an accumulation of non-ionizing stars associated with an extended episode of star formation in the nucleus rather than increased competition for ionizing photons by dust. SFR calibrations using the non-thermal radio continuum yield values which only agree with the 33 GHz free-free SFRs for the nucleus and underestimate the SFRs from the extranuclear star-forming regions by an average factor of ~2 and ~4-5 before and after subtracting local background emission, respectively. This result likely arises from the cosmic-ray (CR) electrons decaying within the starburst region with negligible escape, whereas the transient nature of star formation in the young extranuclear star-forming complexes allows for CR electrons to diffuse significantly further than dust-heating photons, resulting in an underestimate of the true SFR. Finally, we find that the SFRs estimated using the total 33 GHz flux density appear to agree well with those estimated using free-free emission due to the large thermal fractions present at these frequencies even when local diffuse backgrounds are not removed. Thus, rest-frame 33 GHz observations may act as a reliable method to measure the SFRs of galaxies at increasingly high redshift without the need of ancillary radio data to account for the non-thermal emission.


Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific | 2011

KINGFISH—Key Insights on Nearby Galaxies: A Far-Infrared Survey with Herschel: Survey Description and Image Atlas

Robert C. Kennicutt; D. Calzetti; G. Aniano; P. N. Appleton; Lee Armus; P. Beirão; Alberto D. Bolatto; Bernhard R. Brandl; Alison F. Crocker; K. V. Croxall; Daniel A. Dale; J. Dononvan Meyer; B. T. Draine; C. W. Engelbracht; M. Galametz; Karl D. Gordon; Brent Groves; Cai-Na Hao; G. Helou; Joannah L. Hinz; L. K. Hunt; Barbara Johnson; Jin Koda; Oliver Krause; Adam K. Leroy; Yuejin Li; Sharon E. Meidt; Edward Montiel; E. J. Murphy; Nurur Rahman

The KINGFISH project (Key Insights on Nearby Galaxies: a Far-Infrared Survey with Herschel) is an imaging and spectroscopic survey of 61 nearby (d < 30 Mpc) galaxies, chosen to cover a wide range of galaxy properties and local interstellar medium (ISM) environments found in the nearby universe. Its broad goals are to characterize the ISM of present-day galaxies, the heating and cooling of their gaseous and dust components, and to better understand the physical processes linking star formation and the ISM. KINGFISH is a direct descendant of the Spitzer Infrared Nearby Galaxies Survey (SINGS), which produced complete Spitzer imaging and spectroscopic mapping and a comprehensive set of multiwavelength ancillary observations for the sample. The Herschel imaging consists of complete maps for the galaxies at 70, 100, 160, 250, 350, and 500 μm. The spectral line imaging of the principal atomic ISM cooling lines ([O I] 63 μm, [O III] 88 μm, [N II] 122,205 μm, and [C II] 158 μm) covers the subregions in the centers and disks that already have been mapped in the mid-infrared with Spitzer. The KINGFISH and SINGS multiwavelength data sets combined provide panchromatic mapping of the galaxies sufficient to resolve individual star-forming regions, and tracing the important heating and cooling channels of the ISM, across a wide range of local extragalactic ISM environments. This article summarizes the scientific strategy for KINGFISH, the properties of the galaxy sample, the observing strategy, and data processing and products. It also presents a combined Spitzer and Herschel image atlas for the KINGFISH galaxies, covering the wavelength range 3.6–500 μm. All imaging and spectroscopy data products will be released to the Herschel user-generated product archives.

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Lee Armus

California Institute of Technology

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E. J. Murphy

National Radio Astronomy Observatory

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P. N. Appleton

California Institute of Technology

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Karl D. Gordon

Space Telescope Science Institute

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H. Roussel

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Daniela Calzetti

Space Telescope Science Institute

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