Dust-corrected surface photometry of M 31 from the Spitzer far infrared observations
Elmo Tempel, Antti Tamm, Peeter Tenjes

TL;DR
This study models and corrects for dust absorption in M31 using far-infrared data from Spitzer, revealing intrinsic luminosity, dust temperature distribution, and the galaxy's true surface brightness.
Contribution
It introduces a novel model combining far-infrared observations with galaxy components to recover intrinsic surface brightness and dust properties of M31.
Findings
Warm dust temperature varies between 56-60 K, highest in spiral arms.
Cold dust temperature ranges from 15-19 K, rising to 25 K at the center.
20% of M31's total B-luminosity is obscured by dust.
Abstract
We create a model for recovering the intrinsic, absorption-corrected surface brightness distribution of a galaxy and apply the model to the M31. We construct a galactic model as a superposition of axially symmetric stellar components and a dust disc to analyse the intrinsic absorption efects. Dust column density is assumed to be proportional to the far-infrared flux of the galaxy. Along each line of sight, the observed far-infrared spectral energy distribution is approximated with modified black body functions considering dust components with different temperatures, allowing to determine the temperatures and relative column densities of the dust components. We apply the model to the nearby galaxy M31 using the Spitzer Space Telescope far-infrared observations for mapping dust distribution and temperature. A warm and a cold dust component are distinguished. The temperature of the…
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