The heating of dust by old stellar populations in the Bulge of M31
Brent Groves, Oliver Krause, Karin Sandstrom, Anika Schmiedeke, Adam, Leroy, Hendrik Linz, Maria Kapala, Hans-Walter Rix, Eva Schinnerer, Fatemeh, Tabatabaei, Fabian Walter, and Elisabete da Cunha

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that old stellar populations in the bulge of M31 can sufficiently heat dust to warm temperatures without the need for young stars or UV radiation, using Herschel imaging and stellar radiation modeling.
Contribution
It provides direct evidence that optical radiation from old stars heats dust in galaxy spheroids, challenging the assumption that young stars are necessary for dust heating.
Findings
Dust temperature rises to ~35K in the bulge center.
Optical radiation from old stars is sufficient to heat dust.
Dust heating correlates with stellar radiation density.
Abstract
We use new Herschel multi-band imaging of the Andromeda galaxy to analyze how dust heating occurs in the central regions of galaxy spheroids that are essentially devoid of young stars. We construct a dust temperature map of M31 through fitting modified blackbody SEDs to the Herschel data, and find that the temperature within 2 kpc rises strongly from the mean value in the disk of 17 pm 1K to \sim35K at the centre. UV to near-IR imaging of the central few kpc shows directly the absence of young stellar populations, delineates the radial profile of the stellar density, and demonstrates that even the near-UV dust extinction is optically thin in M31's bulge. This allows the direct calculation of the stellar radiation heating in the bulge, U\ast(r), as a function of radius. The increasing temperature profile in the centre matches that expected from the stellar heating, i.e. that the dust…
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