SIMBAD references

2012A&A...546A..34F - Astronomy and Astrophysics, volume 546A, 34-34 (2012/10-1)

The Herschel exploitation of local galaxy Andromeda (HELGA). I. Global far-infrared and sub-mm morphology.

FRITZ J., GENTILE G., SMITH M.W.L., GEAR W.K., BRAUN R., ROMAN-DUVAL J., BENDO G.J., BAES M., EALES S.A., VERSTAPPEN J., BLOMMAERT J.A.D.L., BOQUIEN M., BOSELLI A., CLEMENTS D., COORAY A.R., CORTESE L., DE LOOZE I., FORD G.P., GALLIANO F., GOMEZ H.L., GORDON K.D., LEBOUTEILLER V., O'HALLORAN B., KIRK J., MADDEN S.C., PAGE M.J., REMY A., ROUSSEL H., SPINOGLIO L., THILKER D., VACCARI M., WILSON C.D. and WAELKENS C.

Abstract (from CDS):

We have obtained Herschel images at five wavelengths from 100 to 500µm of a ∼5.5x2.5 degree area centred on the local galaxy M31 (Andromeda), our nearest neighbour spiral galaxy, as part of the Herschel guaranteed time project ``HELGA''. The main goals of HELGA are to study the characteristics of the extended dust emission, focusing on larger scales than studied in previous observations of Andromeda at an increased spatial resolution, and the obscured star formation. In this paper we present data reduction and Herschel maps, and provide a description of the far-infrared morphology, comparing it with features seen at other wavelengths. We used high-resolution maps of the atomic hydrogen, fully covering our fields, to identify dust emission features that can be associated to M31 with confidence, distinguishing them from emission coming from the foreground Galactic cirrus. Thanks to the very large extension of our maps we detect, for the first time at far-infrared wavelengths, three arc-like structures extending out to ∼21, ∼26 and ∼31kpc respectively, in the south-western part of M31. The presence of these features, hosting ∼2.2x106M of dust, is safely confirmed by their detection in HI maps. Overall, we estimate a total dust mass of ∼5.8x107M, about 78% of which is contained in the two main ring-like structures at 10 and 15kpc, at an average temperature of 16.5K. We find that the gas-to-dust ratio declines exponentially as a function of the galacto-centric distance, in agreement with the known metallicity gradient, with values ranging from 66 in the nucleus to ∼275 in the outermost region. Dust in M31 extends significantly beyond its optical radius (∼21kpc) and what was previously mapped in the far-infrared. An annular-like segment, located approximately at R25, is clearly detected on both sides of the galaxy, and two other similar annular structures are undoubtedly detected on the south-west side even further out.

Abstract Copyright:

Journal keyword(s): galaxies: individual: M31 - galaxies: ISM - infrared: ISM

Simbad objects: 7

goto Full paper

goto View the references in ADS

To bookmark this query, right click on this link: simbad:2012A&A...546A..34F and select 'bookmark this link' or equivalent in the popup menu