A Cool Dust Factory in the Crab Nebula: A Herschel Study of the Filaments
H. L. Gomez, O. Krause, M. J. Barlow, B. M. Swinyard, P. J. Owen, C., J. R. Clark, M. Matsuura, E. L. Gomez, J. Rho, M.-A. Besel, J. Bouwman, W. K., Gear, Th. Henning, R. J. Ivison, E. T. Polehampton, B. Sibthorpe

TL;DR
This study uses Herschel infrared and submillimeter data to analyze dust formation in the Crab Nebula, revealing significant dust mass from supernova ejecta and clarifying the dust composition and emission components.
Contribution
First detailed Herschel analysis of Crab Nebula's dust, quantifying dust mass and composition, and separating synchrotron and line emissions from the dust continuum.
Findings
Detected multiple forbidden lines from ejecta elements.
Estimated dust mass of approximately 0.24 solar masses for silicates.
Found that supernova ejecta efficiently condense refractory elements into dust.
Abstract
Whether supernovae are major sources of dust in galaxies is a long-standing debate. We present infrared and submillimeter photometry and spectroscopy from the Herschel Space Observatory of the Crab Nebula between 51 and 670 micron as part of the Mass Loss from Evolved StarS program. We compare the emission detected with Herschel with multiwavelength data including millimeter, radio, mid-infrared and archive optical images. We carefully remove the synchrotron component using the Herschel and Planck fluxes measured in the same epoch. The contribution from line emission is removed using Herschel spectroscopy combined with Infrared Space Observatory archive data. Several forbidden lines of carbon, oxygen and nitrogen are detected where multiple velocity components are resolved, deduced to be from the nitrogen-depleted, carbon-rich ejecta. No spectral lines are detected in the SPIRE…
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