The Resolved Distributions of Dust Mass and Temperature in Local Group Galaxies
pith:5EJQUR6D Add to your LaTeX paper
What is a Pith Number?\usepackage{pith}
\pithnumber{5EJQUR6D}
Prints a linked pith:5EJQUR6D badge after your title and writes the identifier into PDF metadata. Compiles on arXiv with no extra files. Learn more
read the original abstract
We utilize archival far-infrared maps from the Herschel Space Observatory in four Local Group galaxies (Small and Large Magellanic Clouds, M31, and M33). We model their Spectral Energy Distribution (SED) from 100 to 500 $\mu$m using a single-temperature modified blackbody emission with a fixed emissivity index of $\beta = 1.8$. From the best-fit model, we derive the dust temperature, $T_{\rm d}$, and the dust mass surface density, $\Sigma_{\rm d}$, at 13 parsec resolution for SMC and LMC, and at 167 parsec resolution for all targets. This measurement allows us to build the distribution of dust mass and luminosity as functions of dust temperature and mass surface density. We compare those distribution functions among galaxies and between regions in a galaxy. We find that LMC has the highest mass-weighted average $T_{\rm d}$, while M31 and M33 have the lowest mass-weighted average $T_{\rm d}$. Within a galaxy, star forming regions have higher $T_{\rm d}$ and $\Sigma_{\rm d}$ relative to the overall distribution function, due to more intense heating by young stars and higher gas mass surface density. When we degrade the resolutions to mimic distant galaxies, the mass-weighted mean temperature gets warmer as the resolution gets coarser, meaning the temperature derived from unresolved observation is systematically higher than that in highly resolved observation. As an implication, the total dust mass is lower (underestimated) in coarser resolutions. This resolution-dependent effect is more prominent in clumpy star-forming galaxies (SMC, LMC, and M33), and less prominent in more quiescent massive spiral (M31).
This paper has not been read by Pith yet.
Forward citations
Cited by 1 Pith paper
-
The ${}^{13}\mathrm{CO}(2{-}1)/^{12}\mathrm{CO}(2{-}1)$ Line Ratio from 100 Molecular Clouds in the Large Magellanic Cloud
Observational study of 100 LMC GMCs finds median 13CO(2-1)/12CO(2-1) line ratio of 0.078, nearly linear with luminosity, and higher in clouds hosting IR-bright young stellar objects.
discussion (0)
Sign in with ORCID, Apple, or X to comment. Anyone can read and Pith papers without signing in.