PACS and SPIRE photometer maps of M33: First results of the Herschel M33 extended survey (HERM33ES)
C.Kramer, C.Buchbender, E.M.Xilouris, M.Boquien, J.Braine, D.Calzetti,, S.Lord, B.Mookerjea, G.Quintana-Lacaci, M.Relano, G.Stacey, F.S.Tabatabaei,, S.Verley, S.Aalto, S.Akras, M.Albrecht, S.Anderl, R.Beck, F.Bertoldi,, F.Combes, M.Dumke, S.Garcia-Burillo, M.Gonzalez, P.Gratier

TL;DR
This study uses Herschel PACS and SPIRE data to analyze the dust properties and structure of the nearby galaxy M33, revealing a dominant cold dust component and radial temperature variations.
Contribution
First detailed SED modeling of M33 using Herschel data with two-component dust models, providing insights into dust temperature distribution and galaxy structure.
Findings
Cold dust dominates the dust mass in M33.
Dust temperature decreases with galacto-centric distance.
Gas-to-dust ratio exceeds solar value, consistent with subsolar metallicity.
Abstract
Within the framework of the HERM33ES key project, we are studying the star forming interstellar medium in the nearby, metal-poor spiral galaxy M33, exploiting the high resolution and sensitivity of Herschel. We use PACS and SPIRE maps at 100, 160, 250, 350, and 500 micron wavelength, to study the variation of the spectral energy distributions (SEDs) with galacto-centric distance. Detailed SED modeling is performed using azimuthally averaged fluxes in elliptical rings of 2 kpc width, out to 8 kpc galacto-centric distance. Simple isothermal and two-component grey body models, with fixed dust emissivity index, are fitted to the SEDs between 24 and 500 micron using also MIPS/Spitzer data, to derive first estimates of the dust physical conditions. The far-infrared and submillimeter maps reveal the branched, knotted spiral structure of M33. An underlying diffuse disk is seen in all SPIRE maps…
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