Dust/gas correlations from Herschel Observations
Julia Roman-Duval, Frank P. Israel, Alberto Bolatto, Annie Hughes,, Adam Leroy, Margaret Meixner, Karl Gordon, Suzanne C. Madden, Deborah, Paradis, Akiko Kawamura, Aigen Li, Marc Sauvage, Tony Wong, Jean-Philippe, Bernard, Chad Engelbracht, Sacha Hony, Sungeun Kim, Karl Misselt

TL;DR
This study uses Herschel data to analyze the correlation between dust and gas in the LMC, revealing that H2 envelopes and X factor variations near CO boundaries mainly cause FIR excess, rather than dust properties or gas-to-dust ratio changes.
Contribution
It provides higher resolution analysis of dust-gas correlation in the LMC and identifies H2 envelopes and X factor variations as key factors for FIR excess.
Findings
FIR excess correlates with intermediate HI and dust densities.
H2 envelopes not traced by CO are a primary cause of FIR excess.
X factor variations are significant near CO boundaries.
Abstract
Spitzer and IRAS observations of the LMC suggest an excess of FIR emission with respect to the gas surface density traced by 12CO and HI 21 cm emission lines. This "FIR excess" is noticeable near molecular clouds in the LMC, and has usually been interpreted as the presence of a self-shielded H2 component not traced by CO molecular clouds' envelopes. Based on Herschel observations, we examine the correlation between gas and dust at higher resolution than previously achieved. We consider three additional causes for the FIR excess: X factor, FIR dust emissivity, and gas-to-dust ratio variations between the diffuse and dense phases of the ISM. We examine the structure of NT80 and NT71, two molecular clouds detected in the NANTEN 12CO survey of the LMC. Dust surface density maps are derived from the HERITAGE data. The gas phase is traced by MAGMA 12CO and ATCA HI 21 cm observations of the…
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