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A Low Incidence of Mid-infrared Variability in Dwarf Galaxies

Nathan J. Secrest, Shobita Satyapal

2020The Astrophysical Journal22 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Using 8.4 yr of photometry from the AllWISE/NEOWISE multi-epoch catalogs, we compare the mid-infrared variability properties of a sample of 2197 dwarf galaxies ( M ⋆ < 2 × 10 9 h −2 M ☉ ) to a sample of 6591 more massive galaxies ( M ⋆ ≥ 10 10 h −2 M ☉ ) matched in mid-infrared apparent magnitude. We find only two dwarf galaxies with mid-infrared variability, a factor of ∼10 less frequent than the more massive galaxies ( p = 6 × 10 −6 ), consistent with previous findings of optical variability in low-mass and dwarf galaxies using data with a similar baseline and cadence. Within the more massive control galaxy population, we see no evidence for a stellar mass dependence of mid-infrared variability, suggesting that this apparent reduction in the frequency of variable objects occurs below a stellar mass of ∼10 10 h −2 M ☉ . Compared to the more massive galaxies, active galactic nuclei (AGNs) selected in dwarf galaxies using either their mid-infrared color or optical emission-line classification are systematically missed by variability selection. Our results suggest, in agreement with previous optical studies at similar cadence, that variability selection of AGNs in dwarf galaxies is ineffective unless higher-cadence data are used.

Topics & Concepts

PhysicsAstrophysicsDwarf galaxyAstronomyDwarf galaxy problemDwarf spheroidal galaxyGalaxyPhotometry (optics)Luminous infrared galaxyElliptical galaxyStellar massPeculiar galaxyDiscGalaxy groupLenticular galaxyRadio galaxyControl sampleIrregular galaxySurface brightness fluctuationActive galactic nucleusGalaxy mergerMilky WayGalaxy formation and evolutionGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, PhenomenaAstronomy and Astrophysical ResearchStellar, planetary, and galactic studies
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