7.5. The Role of Dust
Since most of our observations sample rest-frame UV wavelengths, derived
quantities such as star formation rates are sensitive to gas and dust
extinction. As noted earlier,
Ly is particularly
vulnerable since it is a resonance line whose escape is dependent upon
the distribution of neutral gas.
One method of estimating the amount of reddening, used by
Meurer et al. (1997),
Pettini et al. (1999),
Dickinson (1998),
Bunker et al. (1999), and
Steidel et al. (1999),
is to assume a very young
( 107 yr
age) starburst and ascribe any color excess in the emitted UV to
extinction. The uncertainty, of course, is that aging of a starburst
will also cause reddening. Typical extinction corrections are factors of
2-7 near 1500 Å, depending upon the extinction law applied.
Meurer et al. (1997)
derive a correction factor of
15, in part due to
different assumptions regarding the spectral slope of the underlying,
unreddened population.
Near-infrared photometry offers the possibility of more reliable
estimates of reddening, since at these wavelengths photometry is
insensitive to the details and ages of the hottest stars. The
ground-based (Keck/NIRC) J-band detection of 0140+326 RD1 by
Armus et al. (1998)
suggests substantial reddening (AV > 0.5, for
Bruzual & Charlot
(1993)
models with ages less than 108 yr), which is somewhat
surprising given its nondetection in deep sub-mm observations, strong
Ly emission, and similar
star formation rates inferred from its rest-frame UV continuum and
Ly
flux density.
HST/NICMOS imaging offers deep, reliable near-infrared photometry
and will be a valuable asset for measuring reddening in Lyman-break
galaxies. For example,
Weymann et al. (1998)
use NICMOS F110W and F160W photometry to limit the reddening and star
formation rate of HDF 4-473.0 (z = 5.60). They find that the
spectral energy distribution limits the reddening to 0.00
E(B-V)
0.12 and the star
formation rate to 8
M
yr-1
19
M
yr-1. This modest amount of extinction is consistent with the
rather strong Ly
emission line emerging from this distant galaxy.
Near-infrared spectroscopy offers a potent tool for studying the dust
content, mass, age, and kinematics of distant galaxies.
Pettini et al. (1998)
recently reported a pilot program of near-infrared spectra of the
well-studied, rest-frame optical, nebular emission lines from
H II regions in five Lyman-break galaxies at
z 3. The
observations used the CGS4 spectrometer on the United Kingdom Infrared
Telescope and targeted the redshifted Balmer and [O III] emission lines.
H
luminosities, uncorrected for intrinsic dust extinction, imply star
formation rates of 20-270 h70-2
M
yr-1 (q0 = 0.1); that is, typically a
factor of several larger than that inferred from the UV continuum of
these galaxies. The implication is that an extinction of 1-2 mag at 1500
Å may be typical of the Lyman-break population. Velocity
dispersions of
70 km s-1
were reported in four out of the five galaxies, suggesting virial masses
Mvir
(1-5) ×
1010
M
. The
relative redshifts of
Ly
emission,
interstellar absorption, and nebular emission lines vary by several
hundred km s-1, suggestive of large-scale outflows. Similar
scale outflows are common in regions of rapid star formation locally.
Future higher resolution (spectral and spatial) observations of these and related rest-frame optical transitions redshifted into the near-infrared should better address the kinematics and possibly the light-element abundances of young, forming galaxies.