Bibcode
Corradi, Romano L. M.; Beckman, John E.; Simonneau, Eduardo
Referencia bibliográfica
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, Volume 282, Issue 3, pp. 1005-1017.
Fecha de publicación:
10
1996
Número de citas
26
Número de citas referidas
25
Descripción
We present a set of face-on models of the radiative transfer of stellar
light in exponential discs, taking into account absorption and multiple
scattering (diffusion) by dust. Attention has been directed towards the
effects on the observable photometric properties of different
distributions of stars and dust perpendicular to the galactic plane. A
realistic model for the arm and interarm regions in the Galaxy, with
wavelength-dependent star-to-dust scaleheight ratios, is presented.
Face-on luminosity profiles, dust-induced colour excess profiles, and
observable scalelengths are computed for various photometric bands
(UBVRIK) and for a wide range of on-axis optical thickness tau^0_V (from
1 to 50). For luminosity profiles, we carefully discuss the effects of
neglecting scattering on the predicted surface brightness. The total
flux (integrated out to three disc scalelengths), which is lost because
of dust extinction, is much reduced if scattering is considered: the
total extinction is in fact as small as 0.1 mag for tau^0_V=4, and
becomes larger than 1mag only for tau^0_V<~30. For colour excesses,
differential extinction produces artificial radial colour gradients in
the discs. Their predicted amplitude is strongly dependent on the
adopted dust parameters and the star-to-dust scaleheight ratios. Both
effects can produce uncertainties in the predicted colour variations of
several tenths of a magnitude. Owing to the strong dependence of
reddening on the geometrical distributions of stars and dust, no
standard extinction law can be expected for external galaxies, even if
the physical properties of the dust are invariant. Differential
extinction causes the observed scalelength to vary with passband. The
advantages and limitations of the so-called `scalelength test' as a
diagnostic of the total dust content of spiral galaxies are discussed.