The Elusive ISM of Dwarf Galaxies: Excess Submillimetre Emission and CO-Dark Molecular Gas
Suzanne C. Madden (1), Maud Galametz (1,5), Diane Cormier (1), Vianney, Lebouteiller (1), Frederic Galliano (1), Sacha Hony (1), Aurelie Remy (1),, Marc Sauvage (1), Alessandra Contursi (2), Eckhard Sturm (2), Albrecht, Poglitsch (2), Michael Pohlen (3), M.W.L. Smith (3)

TL;DR
This study uses Herschel observations to explore the dust and gas properties of dwarf galaxies, revealing a submillimetre excess and unique line ratios that inform our understanding of low-metallicity interstellar media.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the dust and gas characteristics of dwarf galaxies, especially regarding the submillimetre excess and the ([CII]+CO) to H2 conversion factor.
Findings
Detection of submillimetre excess in low metallicity galaxies.
Higher L[CII]/L(CO) ratios compared to metal-rich galaxies.
[OIII] line often dominates FIR emission in dwarf galaxies.
Abstract
The Herschel Dwarf Galaxy Survey investigates the interplay of star formation activity and the the metal-poor gas and dust of dwarf galaxies using FIR and submillimetre imaging spectroscopic and photometric observations in the 50 to 550mu window of the Herschel Space Observatory. The dust SEDs are well constrained with the new Herschel and MIR Spitzer data. A submillimetre excess is often found in low metallicity galaxies, which,if tracing very cold dust, would highlight large dust masses not easily reconciled in some cases, given the low metallicities and expected gas-to-dust mass ratios. The galaxies are also mapped in the FIR fine-structure lines (63 and 145mu OI, 158mu CII, 122 and 205mu NII, 88mu OIII) probing the low density ionised gas, the HII regions and photodissociation regions. While still early in the Herschel mission we can already see, along with earlier studies, that…
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