Submillimeter to centimeter excess emission from the Magellanic Clouds. II. On the nature of the excess
Caroline Bot, Nathalie Ysard, D\'eborah Paradis, Jean-Philippe, Bernard, Guilaine Lagache, Frank P. Israel, William F. Wall

TL;DR
This study confirms a millimeter excess emission in the Magellanic Clouds' spectral energy distributions and explores potential origins, ruling out some explanations and suggesting spinning dust as a plausible cause, especially in the SMC.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of the millimeter excess in the Magellanic Clouds and evaluates various hypotheses for its origin, including dust properties and emission mechanisms.
Findings
Millimeter excess confirmed above dust, free-free, and synchrotron emissions.
Very cold dust and CMB fluctuations unlikely causes.
Spinning dust emission is a plausible explanation, especially for the SMC.
Abstract
Dust emission at submm to cm wavelengths is often simply the Rayleigh-Jeans tail of dust particles at thermal equilibrium and is used as a cold mass tracer in various environments including nearby galaxies. However, well-sampled spectral energy distributions of the nearby, star-forming Magellanic Clouds have a pronounced (sub-)millimeter excess (Israel et al., 2010). This study attempts to confirm the existence of such a millimeter excess above expected dust, free-free and synchrotron emission and to explore different possibilities for its origin. We model NIR to radio spectral energy distributions of the Magellanic Clouds with dust, free-free and synchrotron emission. A millimeter excess emission is confirmed above these components and its spectral shape and intensity are analysed in light of different scenarios: very cold dust, Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) fluctuations, a change…
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