Spatially resolved stellar, dust and gas properties of the post-interacting Whirlpool Galaxy system
Erin Mentuch Cooper, Christine D. Wilson, Kelly Foyle, George Bendo,, Jin Koda, Marten Baes, M\'ed\'eric Boquien, Alessandro Boselli, Laure Ciesla,, Asantha Cooray, Steve Eales, Maud Galametz, Vianney Lebouteiller, Tara, Parkin, H\'el\`ene Roussel, Marc Sauvage, Luigi Spinoglio

TL;DR
This study uses infrared imaging to analyze the spatial distribution of dust, gas, and stellar properties in the interacting Whirlpool galaxy system, revealing insights into their star formation history and dust heating mechanisms.
Contribution
It provides the first spatially resolved maps of dust and gas properties in the Whirlpool system, highlighting differences in dust-to-stellar mass ratios and dust heating sources in the post-interacting galaxies.
Findings
Both galaxies experienced a starburst 370-480 Myr ago.
NGC 5194 shows a constant dust-to-stellar mass ratio.
NGC 5195's dust is heated by an intense interstellar radiation field.
Abstract
Using infrared imaging from the Herschel Space Observatory, observed as part of the VNGS, we investigate the spatially resolved dust properties of the interacting Whirlpool galaxy system (NGC 5194 and NGC 5195), on physical scales of 1 kpc. Spectral energy distribution modelling of the new infrared images in combination with archival optical, near- through mid-infrared images confirms that both galaxies underwent a burst of star formation ~370-480 Myr ago and provides spatially resolved maps of the stellar and dust mass surface densities. The resulting average dust-to-stellar mass ratios are comparable to other spiral and spheroidal galaxies studied with Herschel, with NGC 5194 at log M(dust)/M(star)= -2.5+/-0.2 and NGC 5195 at log M(dust)/M(star)= -3.5+/-0.3. The dust-to-stellar mass ratio is constant across NGC 5194 suggesting the stellar and dust components are coupled. In contrast,…
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