Untangling the Nature of Spatial Variations of Cold Dust Properties in Star Forming Galaxies
Allison Kirkpatrick, Daniela Calzetti, Robert Kennicutt, Maud, Galametz, Karl Gordon, Brent Groves, Leslie Hunt, Daniel Dale, Joannah Hinz,, Fatemeh Tabatabaei

TL;DR
This study analyzes spatial variations in cold dust properties across 20 star-forming galaxies using Herschel and Spitzer data, revealing how star formation and old stars influence dust temperature and emissivity.
Contribution
It introduces a pixel-by-pixel SED fitting method to resolve radial variations in dust temperature and emissivity within galaxies, expanding understanding of dust heating mechanisms.
Findings
SFR/L(500) correlates with cold dust temperature, indicating UV photon influence.
Old stellar population contributes to dust heating, affecting emissivity.
Radial trends in T(cold) and beta confirm changing dust properties across galaxy disks.
Abstract
We investigate the far-infrared (IR) dust emission for 20 local star forming galaxies from the Key Insights on Nearby Galaxies: A Far-IR Survey with Herschel (KINGFISH) sample. We model the far-IR/submillimeter spectral energy distribution (SED) using images from Spitzer Space Telescope and Herschel Space Observatory. We calculate the cold dust temperature (T(cold)) and emissivity (beta) on a pixel by pixel basis (where each pixel ranges from 0.1-3 kpc^2) using a two temperature modified blackbody fitting routine. Our fitting method allows us to investigate the resolved nature of temperature and emissivity variations by modeling from the galaxy centers to the outskirts (physical scales of ~15-50 kpc, depending on the size of the galaxy). We fit each SED in two ways: (1) fit T(cold) and beta simultaneously, (2) hold beta constant and fit T(cold). We compare T(cold) and beta with star…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
