A Spitzer Space Telescope far-infrared spectral atlas of compact sources in the Magellanic Clouds. II. The Small Magellanic Cloud
Jacco Th. van Loon (Keele University, UK), Joana M. Oliveira (Keele, University, UK), Karl D. Gordon (STScI), G. C. Sloan (Cornell University),, and C. W. Engelbracht (University of Arizona)

TL;DR
This study provides a detailed far-infrared spectral atlas of compact sources in the Small Magellanic Cloud using Spitzer, revealing effects of low metallicity on dust and gas properties in star-forming regions.
Contribution
First comprehensive 52-93 micron spectral analysis of SMC compact sources, highlighting metallicity effects on dust temperature, composition, and gas emission lines.
Findings
Lower metallicity leads to weaker oxygen lines and dust continuum.
Dust in SMC YSOs is warmer than in LMC counterparts.
Crystalline water ice detected in at least one YSO.
Abstract
We present 52-93 micron spectra, obtained with the Spitzer Space Telescope, of luminous compact far-IR sources in the SMC. These comprise 9 Young Stellar Objects (YSOs), the compact HII region N81 and a similar object within N84, and two red supergiants (RSGs). The spectra of the sources in N81 (of which we also show the ISO-LWS spectrum between 50-170 micron) and N84 both display strong [OI] 63-micron and [OIII] 88-micron fine-structure line emission. We attribute these lines to strong shocks and photo-ionized gas, respectively, in a ``champagne flow'' scenario. The nitrogen content of these two HII regions is very low, definitely N/O<0.04 but possibly as low as N/O<0.01. Overall, the oxygen lines and dust continuum are weaker in star-forming objects in the SMC than in the LMC. We attribute this to the lower metallicity of the SMC compared to that of the LMC. Whilst the dust mass…
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