The Origin of Dust in Early-Type Galaxies and Implications for Accretion onto Supermassive Black Holes
Paul Martini (The Ohio State University), Daniel Dicken (IAS, France),, and Thaisa Storchi-Bergmann (UFGRS, Brazil)

TL;DR
This study investigates the origin of dust in early-type galaxies using Spitzer data, concluding that dust is primarily externally accreted and maintained by cold gas growth, with implications for black hole fueling.
Contribution
It provides evidence that dust in early-type galaxies mainly results from external accretion and is sustained by cold gas growth, challenging previous internal production theories.
Findings
Dust in galaxies with dust lanes is detected across all Spitzer bands.
Galaxies without dust lanes have lower dust masses and are not detected at longer wavelengths.
Dust emission at 24um is dominated by circumstellar dust, not interstellar dust.
Abstract
We have conducted an archival Spitzer study of 38 early-type galaxies (ETGs) in order to determine the origin of the dust in approximately half of this population. Our sample galaxies generally have good wavelength coverage from 3.6um to 160um, as well as visible-wavelength HST images. We use the Spitzer data to estimate dust masses, or establish upper limits, and find that all of the ETGs with dust lanes in the HST data are detected in all of the Spitzer bands and have dust masses of ~10^{5-6.5} Msun, while galaxies without dust lanes are not detected at 70um and 160um and typically have <10^5 Msun of dust. The apparently dust-free galaxies do have 24um emission that scales with the shorter wavelength flux, yet substantially exceeds the expectations of photospheric emission by approximately a factor of three. We conclude this emission is dominated by hot, circumstellar dust around…
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