Abstract
A previous article argued that the antagonism between sight‐lines with and without a bump at 2200 Å disappears, and that the observed properties of interstellar extinction can be globally understood, if it is accepted that scattered starlight contaminates the observed spectrum of reddened stars. The present paper develops this new paradigm by providing a better understanding of the characteristics of this scattered light. It further examines the consequences of this revision of interstellar extinction theory for interpreting the 2200 Å bump and the diffuse interstellar bands (DIBs). Two implications are worth noting: (a) the effect of interstellar extinction on cosmic distance estimations needs to be reconsidered; (b) it is unnecessary to invoke hypothetical particles, such as polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), to explain the peculiarities of interstellar extinction. Hydrogen, by far the most abundant constituent of interstellar clouds, should alone account for the three major features of interstellar extinction: the departure of the continuum from linearity, the bump, and the DIBs.
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