Changes Of Dust Opacity With Density in the Orion A Molecular Cloud
Arabindo Roy, Peter G. Martin, Danae Polychroni, Sylvain Bontemps,, Alain Abergel, Philippe Andre, Doris Arzoumanian, James Di Francesco, Tracey, Hill, Vera Konyves, Quang Nguyen-Luong, Stefano Pezzuto, Nicola Schneider,, Leonardo Testi, and Glenn White

TL;DR
This study investigates how dust grain opacity varies with density in the Orion A molecular cloud, revealing grain evolution and changes in emission properties across different environmental conditions.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed analysis of dust opacity variation with density in Orion A using Herschel data, highlighting grain evolution in dense regions.
Findings
Dust opacity increases with density, suggesting grain growth.
Dust emission power decreases in high-density regions due to radiation attenuation.
Opacity at low densities matches high-latitude diffuse ISM values.
Abstract
We have studied the opacity of dust grains at submillimeter wavelengths by estimating the optical depth from imaging at 160, 250, 350, and 500 um from the Herschel Gould Belt Survey and comparing this to a column density obtained from the 2MASS-derived color excess E(J-Ks). Our main goal was to investigate the spatial variations of the opacity due to "big" grains over a variety of environmental conditions and thereby quantify how emission properties of the dust change with column (and volume) density. The central and southern areas of the Orion A molecular cloud examined here, with NH ranging from 1.5X10^21 cm^-2 to 50X10^21 cm^-2, are well suited to this approach. We fit the multi-frequency Herschel spectral energy distributions (SEDs) of each pixel with a modified blackbody to obtain the temperature, T, and optical depth, \tau(1200), at a fiducial frequency of 1200 GHz (250 um). Using…
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