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We present a study of a large, statistically complete sample of star-forming dwarf galaxies using mid-infrared observations from the {it Spitzer Space Telescope}. The relationships between metallicity, star formation rate (SFR) and mid-infrared color in these systems show that the galaxies span a wide range of properties. However, the galaxies do show a deficit of 8.0 um polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon emission as is apparent from the median 8.0 um luminosity which is only 0.004 lstarf while the median $B$-band luminosity is 0.05 lstarb. Despite many of the galaxies being 8.0 um deficient, there is about a factor of 4 more extremely red galaxies in the [3.6] $-$ [8.0] color than for a sample of normal galaxies with similar optical colors. We show correlations between the [3.6] $-$ [8.0] color and luminosity, metallicity, and to a lesser extent SFRs that were not evident in the original, smaller sample studied previously. The luminosity--metallicity relation has a flatter slope for dwarf galaxies as has been indicated by previous work. We also show a relationship between the 8.0 um luminosity and the metallicity of the galaxy which is not expected given the competing effects (stellar mass, stellar population age, and the hardness of the radiation field) that influence the 8.0 um emission. This larger sample plus a well-defined selection function also allows us to compute the 8.0 um luminosity function and compare it with the one for the local galaxy population. Our results show that below 10$^{9}$ $L$solar, nearly all the 8.0 um luminosity density of the local universe arises from dwarf galaxies that exhibit strong ha emission -- i.e., 8.0 um and ha selection identify similar galaxy populations despite the deficit of 8.0 um emission observed in these dwarfs.
We present mid-infrared Spitzer Space Telescope observations of a complete sample of star-forming dwarf galaxies selected from the KPNO International Spectroscopic Survey. The galaxies span a wide range in mid-infrared properties. Contrary to expecta
We combine Planck HFI data at 857, 545, 353 & 217GHz with data from WISE, Spitzer, IRAS & Herschel to investigate the properties of a flux limited sample of local star-forming galaxies. A 545GHz flux density limit was chosen so that the sample is 80%
Star forming dwarf galaxies (SFDGs) have a high gas content and low metallicities, reminiscent of the basic entities in hierarchical galaxy formation scenarios. In the young universe they probably also played a major role in the cosmic reionization.
The 2020s are poised to continue the past two decades of significant advances based on observations of dwarf galaxies in the nearby universe. Upcoming wide-field photometric surveys will probe substantially deeper than previous data sets, pushing the