Enhanced dust heating in the bulges of early-type spiral galaxies
C. W. Engelbracht, L. K. Hunt, R. A. Skibba, J. L. Hinz, D. Calzetti,, K. D. Gordon, H. Roussel, A. F. Crocker, K. A. Misselt, A. D. Bolatto, R. C., Kennicutt, P. N. Appleton, L. Armus, P. Beir\~ao, B. R. Brandl, K. V., Croxall, D. A. Dale, B. T. Draine, G. Dumas, A. Gil de Paz

TL;DR
This study examines how stellar density and bar strength influence cool dust temperatures in galaxy centers, revealing that early-type spirals with prominent bulges and bars have significantly hotter dust compared to later types.
Contribution
It provides the first quantification of cool dust temperature gradients in galaxy centers as a function of Hubble type and bar strength using Herschel and Spitzer data.
Findings
Cool dust in galaxy centers is on average 23% hotter in early-type spirals.
Barred galaxies with strong bars show higher central-to-disk temperature ratios.
A significant correlation exists between bulge prominence, bar strength, and dust temperature.
Abstract
Stellar density and bar strength should affect the temperatures of the cool (T ~ 20-30 K) dust component in the inner regions of galaxies, which implies that the ratio of temperatures in the circumnuclear regions to the disk should depend on Hubble type. We investigate the differences between cool dust temperatures in the central 3 kpc and disk of 13 nearby galaxies by fitting models to measurements between 70 and 500 microns. We attempt to quantify temperature trends in nearby disk galaxies, with archival data from Spitzer/MIPS and new observations with Herschel/SPIRE, which were acquired during the first phases of the Herschel observations for the KINGFISH (key insights in nearby galaxies: a far-infrared survey with Herschel) sample. We fit single-temperature modified blackbodies to far-infrared and submillimeter measurements of the central and disk regions of galaxies to determine…
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