Modelling the dust emission from dense interstellar clouds: disentangling the effects of radiative transfer and dust properties
N. Ysard, M. Juvela, K. Demyk, V. Guillet, A. Abergel, J.-P. Bernard,, J. Malinen, C. M\'eny, L. Montier, D. Paradis, I. Ristorcelli, L. Verstraete

TL;DR
This study models dense interstellar clouds to distinguish the effects of radiative transfer and dust properties on emission, revealing that dust grain growth and intrinsic optical variations explain observed phenomena better than RT effects alone.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive radiative transfer model of dense clouds incorporating variable dust properties, clarifying their roles in observed dust emission features.
Findings
RT effects cannot explain low T or increased submm emissivity.
Intrinsic grain property variations likely cause the beta-T anti-correlation.
Column density is underestimated when using blackbody fits.
Abstract
With Planck and Herschel, we now have the spectral coverage and angular resolution required to observe dense and cold molecular clouds. As these clouds are optically thick at short wavelength but optically thin at long wavelength, it is tricky to conclude anything about dust properties without a proper treatment of the radiative transfer (RT). Our aim is to disentangle the effects of RT and of dust properties on the variations in the dust emission to provide observers with keys to analyse the emission arising from dense clouds. We model cylindrical clouds, illuminated by the ISRF, and carry out full RT calculations. Dust temperatures are solved using DustEM for amorphous carbons and silicates, grains coated with carbon mantles, and mixed aggregates of carbon and silicate. We allow variations of the grain optical properties with wavelength and temperature. We determine observed colour…
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