Detection and characterization of a 500 mic dust emissivity excess in the Galactic Plane using Herschel/Hi-GAL observations
D. Paradis, R. Paladini, A. Noriega-Crespo, C. M\'eny, F. Piacentini,, M. A. Thompson, D. J. Marshall, M. Veneziani, J.-P. Bernard, S. Molinari

TL;DR
This study investigates a 500μm dust emissivity excess in the Galactic Plane using Herschel/Hi-GAL data, revealing spatial variations and supporting the TLS model for dust emission interpretation.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed mapping of the 500μm emissivity excess across the Galactic Plane and compares the TLS model with black-body fits to interpret dust properties.
Findings
Detected a 13-15% 500μm emissivity excess in the outer Galaxy regions.
Found a decrease in dust temperature with distance from the Galactic center.
Identified spatial variations in TLS model parameters, indicating environmental dependence.
Abstract
Past and recent observations have revealed unexpected variations in the FIR-mm dust emissivity. In the Herschel spectral range, those are often referred to as a 500{\mu}m emission excess. Several dust emission models have been developed to interpret astrophysical data in the FIR-mm domain. However, these are commonly unable to fully reconcile theoretical predictions with observations. In contrast, the recently revised two level system (TLS) model seems to provide a promising way of interpreting the existing data. The newly available Herschel Hi-GAL data which covers most of the inner Milky-Way offers a unique opportunity to investigate possible variations in the dust emission properties both with wavelength and environment. By combining the IRIS 100 {\mu}m with the Hi-GAL 160, 250, 350 and 500 {\mu}m data, we model the dust emission spectra in each pixel of the Hi-GAL maps, using both…
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