Tracing the Energetics and Evolution of Dust with Spitzer: a Chapter in the History of the Eagle Nebula
N. Flagey, F. Boulanger, A. Noriega-Crespo, R. Paladini, T. Montmerle,, S.J. Carey, M. Gagn\'e, and S. Shenoy

TL;DR
This study uses Spitzer observations to analyze the dust properties and energetics of the Eagle Nebula (M16), revealing a warm shell with unique dust characteristics influenced by stellar winds and possibly supernova remnants.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the dust size distribution and heating mechanisms in M16's shell, highlighting the impact of massive star formation on dust evolution.
Findings
The dust in the shell is hotter and has a different size distribution than typical interstellar dust.
The dust heating is influenced by UV radiation and collisions with electrons in a hot plasma.
Two scenarios are proposed: photo-evaporative flows and a supernova remnant.
Abstract
The Spitzer GLIMPSE and MIPSGAL surveys have revealed a wealth of details of the Galactic plane. We use them to study the energetics and dust properties of M16, one of the best known SFR. We present MIPSGAL observations of M16 at 24 and 70 m and combine them with previous IR data. The MIR image shows a shell inside the molecular borders of the nebula. The morphologies at 24 and 70 m are different, and its color ratio is unusually warm. The FIR image resembles the one at 8 m that enhances the molecular cloud. We measure IR SEDs within the shell and the PDRs. We use the DUSTEM model to fit the SEDs and constrain dust temperature, dust size distribution, and ISRF intensity relative to that provided by the star cluster NGC6611. Within the PDRs, the dust temperature, the dust size distribution, and the ISRF intensity are in agreement with expectations. Within the shell, the…
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