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A&A 403, 829-846 (2003)
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:20030408
A mid-infrared spectroscopic survey of starburst galaxies: Excitation and abundances
A. Verma1, D. Lutz1, E. Sturm1, A. Sternberg2, R. Genzel1 and W. Vacca11 Max-Planck-Institut für extraterrestrische Physik, Postfach 1312, 85741 Garching-bei-München, Germany
e-mail: verma@mpe.mpg.de, lutz@mpe.mpg.de, sturm@mpe.mpg.de, vacca@mpe.mpg.de
2 School of Physics and Astronomy, Wise Observatory, Raymond and Beverly Sackler Faculty of Exact Sciences, Tel Aviv University. Ramat Aviv, Tel Aviv 69978, Israel
e-mail: amiel@wise1.tau.ac.il
(Received 14 October 2002 / Accepted 8 January 2003 )
Abstract
We present spectroscopy of mid-infrared emission
lines in twelve starburst regions,
located in eleven starburst galaxies,
for which a significant number of lines between 2.38 and 45
were observed with the ISO Short Wavelength Spectrometer, with
the intention of providing a reference resource
for mid-infrared spectra
of starburst galaxies. The observation apertures were
centred on actively star forming regions, including those
which are inaccessible at optical
wavelengths due to high levels of obscuration.
We use this data set, which includes fine structure and
hydrogen recombination lines, to investigate excitation
and to derive gas phase abundances of neon, argon,
and sulphur of the starburst galaxies.
The derived Ne abundances span
approximately an order of magnitude,
up to values of ~3 times solar.
The excitation ratios measured from the Ne and Ar lines
correlate well with
each other (positively) and with abundances (negatively).
Both in excitation and abundance, a separation of objects
with visible Wolf-Rayet features (high excitation, low abundance) is
noted from those without (low excitation, high abundance).
For a given abundance, the starbursts are of relatively
lower excitation than a comparative sample of H II
regions, possibly due to ageing stellar populations.
By considering the abundance ratios of S with Ne and Ar we
find that, in our higher metallicity systems, S is relatively
underabundant by
a factor of ~3. We discuss the origin
of this deficit and favour depletion of S
onto dust grains as a likely explanation. This
weakness of the mid-infrared fine structure lines of sulphur
has ramifications for future infrared missions such as
SIRTF and Herschel since it
indicates that the S lines are less favourable tracers of star
formation than is suggested by nebular models which do
not consider this effect.
Key words: galaxies: starburst -- galaxies: abundances -- infrared: galaxies -- galaxies: ISM
Offprint request: A. Verma, verma@mpe.mpg.de
SIMBAD Objects
© ESO 2003
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