2012MNRAS.425..763G


Query : 2012MNRAS.425..763G

2012MNRAS.425..763G - Mon. Not. R. Astron. Soc., 425, 763-787 (2012/September-1)

Mapping the cold dust temperatures and masses of nearby KINGFISH galaxies with Herschel.

GALAMETZ M., KENNICUTT R.C., ALBRECHT M., ANIANO G., ARMUS L., BERTOLDI F., CALZETTI D., CROCKER A.F., CROXALL K.V., DALE D.A., DONOVAN MEYER J., DRAINE B.T., ENGELBRACHT C.W., HINZ J.L., ROUSSEL H., SKIBBA R.A., TABATABAEI F.S., WALTER F., WEISS A., WILSON C.D. and WOLFIRE M.G.

Abstract (from CDS):

Taking advantage of the unprecedented combination of sensitivity and angular resolution afforded by the Herschel Space Observatory at far-infrared and submillimetre wavelengths, we aim to characterize the physical properties of cold dust within nearby galaxies, as well as the associated uncertainties, namely the robustness of the parameters we derive using different modified blackbody models. For a pilot subsample of the KINGFISH (Key Insights on Nearby Galaxies: A Far-Infrared Survey with Herschel) key programme, we perform two-temperature fits of the Spitzer and Herschel photometric data (from 24 to 500 µm), with a warm and a cold component, both globally and in each resolution element. We compare the results obtained from different analysis strategies. At global scale, we observe a range of values of the modified blackbody fit parameters βc(.8–2.5) and Tc(19.1–25.1K). We compute maps of our modelling parameters with βc fixed or treated as a free parameter to test the robustness of the temperature and dust surface density maps we deduce. When the emissivity is fixed, we observe steeper temperature gradients as a function of radius than when it is allowed to vary. When the emissivity is fitted as a free parameter, barred galaxies tend to have uniform fitted emissivities. Gathering the parameters obtained in each resolution element in a Tc–βc diagram underlines an anticorrelation between the two parameters. It remains difficult to assess whether the dominant effect is the physics of dust grains, noise, or mixing along the line of sight and in the beam. We finally observe in both cases that the dust column density peaks in central regions of galaxies and bar-ends (coinciding with molecular gas density enhancements usually found in these locations). We also quantify how the total dust mass varies with our assumptions about the emissivity index as well as the influence of the wavelength coverage used in the fits. We show that modified blackbody fits using a shallow emissivity (β < 2.0) lead to significantly lower dust masses compared to the β < 2.0 case, with dust masses lower by up to 50 per cent if βc= 1.5, for instance. The working resolution affects our total dust mass estimates: masses increase from global fits to spatially resolved fits.

Abstract Copyright: 2012 The Authors Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 2012 RAS

Journal keyword(s): dust, extinction - galaxies: ISM - submillimetre: galaxies

Simbad objects: 23

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Number of rows : 23
N Identifier Otype ICRS (J2000)
RA
ICRS (J2000)
DEC
Mag U Mag B Mag V Mag R Mag I Sp type #ref
1850 - 2024
#notes
1 M 31 AGN 00 42 44.330 +41 16 07.50 4.86 4.36 3.44     ~ 12704 1
2 NGC 337 EmG 00 59 50.090 -07 34 40.66 11.97 12.06 11.61 12.4 12.2 ~ 279 2
3 M 33 GiG 01 33 50.8965749232 +30 39 36.630403128 6.17 6.27 5.72     ~ 5858 1
4 M 74 G 01 36 41.7451236624 +15 47 01.107512304 10.52 10.00 9.46 9.16   ~ 1748 1
5 NGC 1097 LIN 02 46 19.059 -30 16 29.68 10.46 9.97 9.48 8.72 9.8 ~ 1349 3
6 NAME Magellanic Clouds GrG 03 00 -71.0           ~ 7109 0
7 NGC 1269 EmG 03 17 18.5785534752 -41 06 28.628735184 9.85 9.83 8.81 8.72   ~ 424 1
8 NGC 1316 GiP 03 22 41.789 -37 12 29.52 9.81 9.15 8.53 7.66   ~ 1398 1
9 NGC 1317 GiP 03 22 44.2823209512 -37 06 13.180903956 12.20 11.78 11.02 10.22   ~ 214 1
10 NGC 1512 GiP 04 03 54.281 -43 20 55.86 11.30 11.43 10.54 10.37   ~ 397 1
11 NAME LMC G 05 23 34.6 -69 45 22     0.4     ~ 17514 0
12 M 81 Sy2 09 55 33.1726556496 +69 03 55.062505368   7.89 6.94     ~ 4464 3
13 M 95 GiP 10 43 57.7313485800 +11 42 13.301191332 10.71 10.51 9.73 9.48   ~ 1128 2
14 NGC 3621 Sy2 11 18 16.300 -32 48 45.36 10.10 9.44 9.56 8.07 10.1 ~ 593 3
15 M 66 GiP 11 20 15.0 +12 59 29 9.85 9.65 8.92     ~ 1389 4
16 M 64 SyG 12 56 43.696 +21 40 57.57   9.36 8.52     ~ 944 2
17 NAME Centaurus A Sy2 13 25 27.61521044 -43 01 08.8050291   8.18 6.84 6.66   ~ 4503 3
18 M 51 Sy2 13 29 52.698 +47 11 42.93   9.26 8.36 8.40   ~ 4341 4
19 M 83 SBG 13 37 00.91920 -29 51 56.7400 8.85 8.11 7.52 7.21   ~ 2585 2
20 NGC 6822 G 19 44 56.199 -14 47 51.29   18 8.1     ~ 1567 0
21 NGC 6946 H2G 20 34 52.332 +60 09 13.24   10.5       ~ 2537 2
22 NGC 7793 GiG 23 57 49.7540045856 -32 35 27.701550744 10.26 9.74 9.28 9.06 9.7 ~ 1110 2
23 NAME Local Group GrG ~ ~           ~ 8443 0

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