Evidence for Environmental Changes in the Submillimeter Dust Opacity
Peter G. Martin, Arabindo Roy, Sylvain Bontemps, Marc-Antoine, Miville-Desch\^enes, Peter A. R. Ade, James J. Bock, Edward L. Chapin, Mark, J. Devlin, Simon R. Dicker, Matthew Griffin, Joshua O. Gundersen, Mark, Halpern, Peter C. Hargrave, David H. Hughes, Jeff Klein

TL;DR
This study quantifies the submillimeter dust opacity in the diffuse Galactic ISM, revealing it is 2-4 times higher than in high-latitude regions, indicating grain evolution and affecting mass estimates from dust emission.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed measurement of dust opacity variations in the Galactic plane, demonstrating increased opacity and lower temperatures compared to high-latitude regions.
Findings
Dust opacity at 1200 GHz is 2-4 times higher than in high-latitude ISM.
Dust temperature in the studied regions is typically around 15 K.
Opacity variations influence mass and column density estimates from dust emission.
Abstract
The submillimeter opacity of dust in the diffuse Galactic interstellar medium (ISM) has been quantified using a pixel-by-pixel correlation of images of continuum emission with a proxy for column density. We used three BLAST bands at 250, 350, and 500 \mu m and one IRAS at 100 \mu m. The proxy is the near-infrared color excess, E(J-Ks), obtained from 2MASS. Based on observations of stars, we show how well this color excess is correlated with the total hydrogen column density for regions of moderate extinction. The ratio of emission to column density, the emissivity, is then known from the correlations, as a function of frequency. The spectral distribution of this emissivity can be fit by a modified blackbody, whence the characteristic dust temperature T and the desired opacity \sigma_e(1200) at 1200 GHz can be obtained. We have analyzed 14 regions near the Galactic plane toward the Vela…
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