Life Cycle of Dust in the Magellanic Clouds and the Milky Way
Svitlana Zhukovska, Thomas Henning

TL;DR
This paper reviews the dust life cycle in the Milky Way and Magellanic Clouds, highlighting observational constraints, the missing dust-source problem, and the role of dust growth processes across different metallicities.
Contribution
It provides a comparative analysis of dust production and growth in the Milky Way and Magellanic Clouds, emphasizing the impact of metallicity on dust sources.
Findings
Discrepancy between stardust production and observed dust mass.
Dust growth in the ISM can account for dust in the LMC.
Dust source roles vary with galaxy metallicity.
Abstract
To a great extent, our understanding of the life cycle of dust is based on the observational and theoretical studies of the Milky Way and the Magellanic Clouds, which will be the topic of this contribution. Over past years, a large volume of observations with unprecedented spatial resolution has been accumulated for the Milky Way. It permits investigations of different stages of the life cycle of dust, from its formation in stellar sources to destruction in star-forming regions and supernovae shocks. Observations of dust emission, extinction, polarisation of light, and interstellar element depletions in the solar neighbourhood provide the most accurate constraints for the reference dust models applied to study extragalactic systems. However, global spatial studies of the circumstellar and interstellar dust are complicated in the Milky Way disk because of high extinction, confusion along…
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.
