Dust and Gas in the Magellanic Clouds from the HERITAGE Herschel Key Project. II. Gas-to-Dust Ratio Variations across ISM Phases
Julia Roman-Duval, Karl Gordon, Margaret Meixner, Caroline Bot,, Alberto D. Bolatto, Annie Hughes, Tony Wong, Brian Babler, Jean-Philippe, Bernard, Geoffrey Clayton, Yasuo Fukui, Maud Galametz, Frederic Galliano,, Simon C. O. Glover, Sacha Hony, Frank Israel, Katherine Jameson

TL;DR
This study investigates how the gas-to-dust ratio varies across different interstellar medium phases in the Magellanic Clouds using Herschel data, revealing differences in dust and gas properties and their implications for galaxy evolution.
Contribution
It provides new measurements of the gas-to-dust ratio and CO-to-H2 conversion factors in the Magellanic Clouds, highlighting the effects of dust grain processes and molecular gas detection uncertainties.
Findings
Gas-to-dust ratios are 380 in LMC and 1200 in SMC.
The atomic-to-molecular transition occurs at specific dust surface densities.
The slope of the dust-gas relation varies between diffuse and dense ISM phases.
Abstract
The spatial variations of the gas-to-dust ratio (GDR) provide constraints on the chemical evolution and lifecycle of dust in galaxies. We examine the relation between dust and gas at 10-50 pc resolution in the Large and Small Magellanic Clouds (LMC and SMC) based on Herschel far-infrared (FIR), H I 21 cm, CO, and Halpha observations. In the diffuse atomic ISM, we derive the gas-to-dust ratio as the slope of the dust-gas relation and find gas-to-dust ratios of 380+250-130 in the LMC, and 1200+1600-420 in the SMC, not including helium. The atomic-to-molecular transition is located at dust surface densities of 0.05 Mo pc-2 in the LMC and 0.03 Mo pc-2 in the SMC, corresponding to AV ~ 0.4 and 0.2, respectively. We investigate the range of CO-to-H2 conversion factor to best account for all the molecular gas in the beam of the observations, and find upper limits on XCO to be 6x1020 cm-2 K-1…
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