ISOCAM view of the starburst galaxies M82, NGC253, and NGC1808

Abstract
We present results of mid-infrared 5.0-16.5 micron spectrophotometric imaging of the starburst galaxies M82, NGC253, and NGC1808 from the ISOCAM instrument on board the Infrared Space Observatory. The mid-infrared spectra of the three galaxies are very similar in terms of features present. The > 11 micron continuum attributed to very small dust grains (VSGs) exhibits a large spread in intensity relative to the short-wavelength emission. We find that the 15 micron dust continuum flux density correlates well with the fine-structure [ArII] 6.99 micron line flux and thus provides a good quantitative indicator of the level of star formation activity. By contrast, the 5-11 micron region dominated by emission from polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) has a nearly invariant shape. Variations in the relative intensities of the PAH features are nevertheless observed, at the 20%-100% level. We illustrate extinction effects on the shape of the mid-infrared spectrum of obscured starbursts, emphasizing the differences depending on the applicable extinction law and the consequences for the interpretation of PAH ratios and extinction estimates. The relative spatial distributions of the PAH, VSG, and [ArII] 6.99 micron emission between the three galaxies exhibit remarkable differences. The < 1 kpc size of the mid-infrared source is much smaller than the optical extent of our sample galaxies and 70%-100% of the IRAS 12 micron flux is recovered within the ISOCAM < 1.5 arcmin squared field of view, indicating that the nuclear starburst dominates the total mid-infrared emission while diffuse light from quiescent disk star formation contributes little.

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