Herschel observations of Hickson compact groups of galaxies: Unveiling the properties of cold dust
T. Bitsakis (1,2,3), V. Charmandaris (1,4,5), P. N. Appleton (2), T., Diaz-Santos (6), E. Le Floc'h (7), E. da Cunha (8), K. Alatalo (2), M. Cluver, (9) (1. University of Crete, 2. NASA Herschel Science Center/Caltech, 3., IESL/FORTH, 4. IAASARS/National Observatory of Athens

TL;DR
This study uses Herschel far-IR and sub-mm data to analyze the dust properties of galaxies in Hickson Compact Groups, revealing insights into galaxy evolution driven by interactions and environmental effects.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive analysis of dust properties in a large sample of Hickson Compact Group galaxies, linking dust evolution to galaxy interactions.
Findings
Many late-type galaxies in old groups have reduced dust-to-stellar mass ratios.
Dust stripping occurs due to gravitational and hydrodynamic interactions.
Diffuse intragroup dust is detected in some groups.
Abstract
We present a Herschel far-IR and sub-mm study of a sample of 120 galaxies in 28 Hickson Compact Groups. Fitting their UV to sub-mm spectral energy distributions with the model of da Cunha et al. (2008), we accurately estimate the dust masses, luminosities and temperatures of the individual galaxies. We find that nearly half of the late-type galaxies in dynamically "old" groups, those with more than 25% of early-type members and redder UV-optical colours, have also significantly lower dust-to-stellar mass ratios compared to those of actively star-forming galaxies of the same mass found both in HCGs and the field. Examining their dust-to-gas mass ratios we conclude that dust was stripped out of these systems as a result of the gravitational and hydrodynamic interactions, experienced due to previous encounters with other group members. About 40% of the early-type galaxies (mostly…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · History and Developments in Astronomy
