Dust properties in M31.I.Basic properties and a discussion on age-dependent dust heating
M. Montalto, S. Seitz, A. Riffeser, U. Hopp, C.-H. Lee, R. Sch\"onrich

TL;DR
This study uses infrared and UV observations to analyze dust distribution, properties, and age-dependent heating in M31, revealing that older stellar populations predominantly heat the dust across the galaxy.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the dust heating mechanisms in M31, highlighting the role of older stars and the distribution of dust components using multi-wavelength data.
Findings
Cold dust dominates the infrared emission of M31.
Most dust heating is due to populations a few Gyr old.
Over 3% of dust mass is in PAHs across the spiral-ring structure.
Abstract
Context. Spitzer Space Telescope observations and dust emission models are used to discuss the distribution of dust and its characteristics in M31. Together with GALEX FUV, NUV, and SDSS images we studied the age dependence of the dust heating process. Methods.Spitzer IRAC/MIPS maps of M31 were matched together and compared to dust emission models allowing to constrain the dust mass, the intensity of the mean radiation field, the abundance of Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons (PAH) particles. The total infrared emission (TIR) was analyzed in function of UV and Optical colors and compared to predictions of models which consider the age-dependent dust heating. Results. We demonstrate that cold-dust component emission dominates the infrared spectral energy distribution of M31. The mean intensity of the radiation field heating the dust is low (typically U<2, where U=1 is the value in the…
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