Cool dust heating and temperature mixing in nearby star-forming galaxies
L.K. Hunt, B.T. Draine, S. Bianchi, K.D. Gordon, G. Aniano, D., Calzetti, D.A. Dale, G. Helou, J.L. Hinz, R.C. Kennicutt, H. Roussel, C.D., Wilson, A. Bolatto, M. Boquien, K.V. Croxall, M. Galametz, A. Gil de Paz, J., Koda, J.C. Munoz-Mateos, K.M. Sandstrom, M. Sauvage

TL;DR
This study investigates dust heating and temperature mixing in 61 nearby star-forming galaxies, revealing that observed flat spectral slopes are mainly due to temperature mixing rather than intrinsic grain property variations.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis of dust temperature, emissivity, and radiation fields across galaxy radii using multiple modeling approaches, highlighting the role of temperature mixing.
Findings
Emissivity index beta varies with radius, sometimes increasing or decreasing.
Flat spectral slopes (beta<=1) are linked to cooler temperatures and low Umin.
Temperature mixing along the line-of-sight explains low beta values in fits.
Abstract
Physical conditions of the interstellar medium in galaxies are closely linked to the ambient radiation field and the heating of dust grains. In order to characterize dust properties in galaxies over a wide range of physical conditions, we present here the radial surface brightness profiles of the entire sample of 61 galaxies from Key Insights into Nearby Galaxies: Far-Infrared Survey with Herschel (KINGFISH). The main goal of our work is the characterization of the grain emissivities, dust temperatures, and interstellar radiation fields responsible for heating the dust. After fitting the dust and stellar radial profiles with exponential functions, we fit the far-infrared spectral energy distribution (SED) in each annular region with single-temperature modified black bodies using both variable (MBBV) and fixed (MBBF) emissivity indices beta, as well as with physically motivated dust…
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