Dust Emissivity Variations In the Milky Way
D. Paradis, J.-Ph. Bernard, and C. Meny

TL;DR
This study investigates how dust emissivity varies across different environments in the Milky Way, revealing that grain coagulation in colder regions affects the spectral shape of dust emission from FIR to mm wavelengths.
Contribution
It provides the first direct measurement of dust emissivity variations across large Galactic regions, confirming grain coagulation effects in cold molecular environments.
Findings
Emissivity spectra are steeper in FIR than in submm/mm.
Dust emissivity varies with temperature, especially in molecular regions.
Colder molecular regions show increased emissivity, supporting grain coagulation.
Abstract
Dust properties appear to vary according to the environment in which the dust evolves. Previous observational indications of these variations in the FIR and submm spectral range are scarce and limited to specific regions of the sky. To determine whether these results can be generalised to larger scales, we study the evolution in dust emissivities from the FIR to mm wavelengths, in the atomic and molecular ISM, along the Galactic plane towards the outer Galaxy. We correlate the dust FIR to mm emission with the HI and CO emission. The study is carried out using the DIRBE data from 100 to 240 mic, the Archeops data from 550 mic to 2.1 mm, and the WMAP data at 3.2 mm (W band), in regions with Galactic latitude |b| < 30 deg, over the Galactic longitude range (75 deg < l < 198 deg) observed with Archeops. In all regions studied, the emissivity spectra in both the atomic and molecular phases…
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