Calibrating Mid-infrared Emission Features as Diagnostics of Star Formation in Infrared-luminous Galaxies via Radiative Transfer Modeling
The Astrophysical Journal American Astronomical Society 999:1 (2026) 25
Abstract:
Luminous infrared (IR) galaxies are key sites of obscured stellar mass assembly at z > 0.5. Their star formation rates (SFRs) are often estimated using the luminosities of the 6.2 and 11.2 μm polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH) features or those of the [Ne ii] and [Ne iii] fine-structure lines, as they are minimally affected by obscuration. It is uncertain whether the calibration of these features as SFR tracers depends on the starburst bolometric luminosity or the level of active galactic nucleus (AGN) activity. We here investigate the relationship between the luminosities of PAH and neon lines with SFR for highly luminous objects using radiative transfer modeling and archival observations of 42 local ultraluminous (≥1012L⊙) IR galaxies (ULIRGs). We find that PAH and [Ne ii] features arise mainly in star-forming regions, with small contributions from the AGN or host, but that the [Ne iii] line has a mixed contribution from both star formation and AGN activity. We present relations between LPAH and L[Ne II], and both starburst luminosity and SFR. We find relations for lower-luminosity (LIR ≃ 1010–1012L⊙) systems underestimate the SFRs in local ULIRGs by up to ∼1 dex. The 6.2 and 11.2 μm PAH features, and the [Ne ii] line, are thus good tracers of SFR in ULIRGs. We do not find that a more luminous AGN affects the relationship between SFR and PAH or neon luminosity but that it can make PAH emission harder to discern. Our results and derived relations are relevant to studies of star-forming and composite galaxies at z < 3 with the James Webb Space Telescope.GA-NIFS: interstellar medium properties and tidal interactions in the evolved massive merging system B14-65666 at z = 7.152
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Oxford University Press 547:2 (2026) stag336
Abstract:
We present JWST/NIRSpec IFU observations of the galaxy system B14-65666, as part of the GA-NIFS survey. Line and continuum emission in this massive system () is resolved into two strong cores surrounded by diffuse emission, as seen in recent JWST/NIRCam imaging. Our data set contains detections of [O ii], [Ne iii], Balmer lines, [O iii], He i, and weak [O iii]. Each spectrum is fit with a model that consistently incorporates interstellar medium conditions (i.e. electron temperature, , electron density, , and colour excess, ). The resulting line fluxes are used to constrain the gas-phase metallicity ( solar) and H-based star formation rate for each region. Common line ratio diagrams (O32–R23, R3–R2, Ne3O2–R23) reveal that each line-emitting region lies at the intersection of low- and high-redshift galaxies, suggesting low ionization and higher metallicity compared to the predominantly lower-mass galaxies studied with the JWST/NIRSpec IFU so far at . Spaxel-by-spaxel fits reveal evidence for both narrow (FWHM km s) and broad (FWHM km s) line emission, the latter of which likely represents tidal interaction or outflows. Comparison to ALMA [C ii]158m and [O iii]88 m data shows a similar velocity structure, and we explore optical-far infrared diagnostics. The two core galaxies both lie on the mass-metallicity relation at , but show contrasting properties (e.g. , ), suggesting distinct evolutionary pathways. Combining the NIRSpec IFU and ALMA data sets, our analysis opens new windows into the merging system B14-65666.WISDOM Project - XXVII. Giant molecular clouds of the lenticular galaxy NGC 1387: similarities with spiral galaxy clouds
(2026)
Black Holes as Telescopes: Discovering Supermassive Binaries through Quasiperiodic Lensed Starlight
Physical Review Letters American Physical Society (APS) 136:6 (2026) 061403
Abstract:
Supermassive black hole (SMBH) binary systems are an unavoidable outcome of galaxy mergers. Their dynamics encode valuable information about their formation and growth, the composition of their host galactic nuclei, the evolution of galaxies, and the nature of gravity. Many SMBH binaries with separations pc-kpc have been found, but closer (subparsec) binaries remain to be confirmed. Identifying these systems may elucidate how binaries evolve past the “final parsec” until gravitational radiation drives them to coalescence. Methods to discover and characterize SMBH binaries can shed light on these important questions and potentially open new multimessenger channels. Here we show that SMBH binaries in nonactive galactic nuclei can be identified and characterized by the gravitational lensing of individual bright stars, located behind them in the host galaxy. The rotation of “caustics”—regions where sources are hugely magnified due to the SMBH binary’s orbit and inspiral—leads to quasiperiodic lensing of starlight (QPLS). The extreme lensing magnification of individual bright stars produces a significant variation in the host galaxies’ luminosity; their lightcurve traces the orbit of the SMBH binary and its evolution, analogous to the waveforms recorded by gravitational-wave (GW) detectors. QPLS probes the population of sources observable by pulsar timing arrays and space detectors (LISA, TianQin), offering advance warning triggers for merging SMBHs for coincident or follow-up GW detections. SMBH population models predict 1–50 QPLS binaries with period less than 10[40] yr with comparable masses and redshift , where is the stellar number density. Additionally, stellar and orbital motion will lead to frequent instances of single or double flares caused by SMBHBs with longer periods. This novel signature can be searched for in a wealth of existing and upcoming time-domain photometric data: identifying quasiperiodic variability in galactic lightcurves will reveal an ensemble of binary systems and illuminate outstanding questions around them.Deblending the MIGHTEE-COSMOS survey with XID+: the resolved radio source counts to S 1.4 ≈ 5μJy
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Oxford University Press 547:2 (2026) stag285