An Investigation of the Dust Content in the Galaxy pair NGC 1512/1510 from Near-Infrared to Millimeter Wavelengths
Guilin Liu (UMass), Daniela Calzetti (UMass), Min S. Yun (UMass),, Grant W. Wilson (UMass), Bruce T. Draine (Princeton), Kimberly Scott (UMass),, Jason Austermann (Colorado), Thushara Perera (UMass), David Hughes (IAONE),, Itziar Aretxaga (INAOE), Kotaro Kohno (Tokyo)

TL;DR
This study combines multi-wavelength data to accurately measure dust masses in the galaxy pair NGC 1512/1510, revealing differences in dust properties related to metallicity and star formation activity.
Contribution
It provides new detailed dust mass estimates and temperature distributions for NGC 1512/1510 using combined infrared and millimeter observations, highlighting variations within the galaxies.
Findings
NGC 1512 has a much larger dust mass than NGC 1510.
The dust-to-gas ratio in the pair is lower than expected.
NGC 1510 exhibits higher warm dust temperatures (~36 K) than NGC 1512 (~24 K).
Abstract
We combine new ASTE/AzTEC 1.1 mm maps of the galaxy pair NGC 1512/1510 with archival Spitzer IRAC and MIPS images covering the wavelength range 3.6--160 um from the SINGS project to derive accurate dust masses in each galaxy, and in sub--galactic regions in NGC 1512. The two galaxies form a pair consisting of a large, high--metallicity spiral (NGC 1512) and a low metallicity, blue compact dwarf (NGC 1510). The derived total dust masses are (2.4+/-0.6) 10^7 Msun and (1.7+/-3.6) 10^5 Msun for NGC 1512 and NGC 1510, respectively. The derived ratio of dust mass to H I gas mass for the galaxy pair (0.0034) is much lower than expected, while regions within NGC 1512, specifically the central region and the arms, do not show such unusually low ratios; furthermore, the dust--to--gas ratio is within expectations for NGC 1510. These results suggest that a fraction of the H I included in the…
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