Abstract

Near-infrared images (1.3-3.7 microns) are presented for the nuclear region of Arp 220. Color maps in J - H and H - K reveal steep gradients, and the two nuclei previously detected at 20 cm and 2.2 microns appear on the J - H image as peaks separated by 1 arcsec. Hot dust emission (T about 1000 K) at 3.7 microns and extremely red J - H and H - K colors are found for both nuclei. The increasingly red color approaching the center of the galaxy are explained most naturally by a mixture of extinction and emission by increasing amounts of hot dust. The near-infrared emission is consistent with a circumnuclear starburst extending to a radius of about 1.5 kpc from the nuclei; further from the center the colors are consistent with a normal late-type stellar population. Inside a radius of 1 kpc the color maps show a NE-SW elongation that aligns with the concentration of molecular gas seen in CO images. The observed 3.7-micron luminosity, when corrected for nuclear extinction determined by 10-micron silicate absorption measurements and normalized by the bolometric luminosity, is consistent with UV-excess quasars and is about 10 times greater than that found in infrared luminous starburst galaxies.

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