Galaxy Zoo: dust and molecular gas in early-type galaxies with prominent dust lanes
Sugata Kaviraj, Yuan-Sen Ting, Martin Bureau, Stanislav S. Shabala, R., Mark Crockett, Joseph Silk, Chris Lintott, Arfon Smith, William C. Keel,, Karen L. Masters, Kevin Schawinski, Steven P. Bamford

TL;DR
This study investigates dust and molecular gas in early-type galaxies with dust lanes, revealing their merger origins, environmental preferences, and properties, including dust mass, distribution, and implications for galaxy evolution.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive analysis of dust and molecular gas in dusty early-type galaxies, highlighting their merger-driven origin and detailed dust and gas properties.
Findings
65% of dusty ETGs are morphologically disturbed, indicating mergers.
Dust masses are several times larger than stellar mass loss predictions.
Most dust is accreted externally, not produced in situ.
Abstract
We study dust and associated molecular gas in 352 nearby early-type galaxies (ETGs) with prominent dust lanes. 65% of these `dusty ETGs' (D-ETGs) are morphologically disturbed, suggesting a merger origin. This is consistent with the D-ETGs residing in lower density environments compared to the controls drawn from the general ETG population. 80% of D-ETGs inhabit the field (compared to 60% of the controls) and <2% inhabit clusters (compared to 10% of the controls). Compared to the controls, D-ETGs exhibit bluer UV-optical colours (indicating enhanced star formation) and an AGN fraction that is more than an order of magnitude greater (indicating higher incidence of nuclear activity). The clumpy dust mass residing in large-scale features is estimated, using the SDSS r-band images, to be 10^{4.5}-10^{6.5} MSun. A comparison to the total (clumpy + diffuse) dust masses- calculated using the…
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