Evidence for dust evolution within the Taurus Complex from Spitzer images
N. Flagey (1, 2), A. Noriega-Crespo (1), F. Boulanger (2), S. J., Carey (1), T. Y. Brooke (1), E. Falgarone (3), T. L. Huard (4), C. E. McCabe, (1, 5), M. A. Miville-Desch\^enes (2), D. L. Padgett (1), R. Paladini (1),

TL;DR
This study uses Spitzer and IRAS data to analyze dust properties and evolution in the Taurus Complex, revealing variations in dust temperature, opacity, and small grain abundance, indicating active dust processing within the cloud.
Contribution
It provides new evidence of dust evolution within a quiescent molecular cloud by combining multi-wavelength IR observations and modeling dust emission variations.
Findings
Dust temperature averages around 14.5K with small spatial variations.
Far-IR dust opacity is twice the typical diffuse ISM value.
Significant dust mass cycling occurs in small grain populations within filamentary structures.
Abstract
We present Spitzer images of the Taurus Complex (TC) and take advantage of the sensitivity and spatial resolution of the observations to characterize the diffuse IR emission across the cloud. This work highlights evidence of dust evolution within the translucent sections of the archetype reference for studies of quiescent molecular clouds. We combine Spitzer 160 um and IRAS 100 um observations to produce a dust temperature map and a far-IR dust opacity map at 5' resolution. The average dust temperature is about 14.5K with a dispersion of +/-1K across the cloud. The far-IR dust opacity is a factor 2 larger than the average value for the diffuse ISM. This opacity increase and the attenuation of the radiation field (RF) both contribute to account for the lower emission temperature of the large grains. The structure of the TC significantly changes in the mid-IR images that trace emission…
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