The equilibrium view on dust and metals in galaxies: Galactic outflows drive low dust-to-metal ratios in dwarf galaxies
Robert Feldmann

TL;DR
This paper presents a dynamical model of galaxy evolution that explains the observed non-linear relationship between dust-to-metal ratios and metallicity, emphasizing the role of galactic outflows in dwarf galaxies.
Contribution
It introduces a dynamical, one-zone model incorporating dust processes and outflows, providing a unified explanation for dust-metal relations across galaxy types.
Findings
Outflows regulate dust and metal dilution in galaxies.
The model reproduces observed Z-D and stellar mass-metallicity relations.
Galactic outflows cause low dust-to-metal ratios in dwarf galaxies.
Abstract
Most galaxy evolution simulations as well as a variety of observational methods assume a linear scaling between the (galaxy-averaged) dust-to-gas ratio D and metallicity Z of the interstellar medium (ISM). Indeed, nearby galaxies with solar or moderately sub-solar metallicities clearly follow this trend albeit with significant scatter. However, a growing number of observations show that the linear scaling breaks down for metal-poor galaxies (Z<0.2 Z_sun), highlighting the need for a more sophisticated modeling of the dust-to-metal ratio of galaxies. Here we study the co-evolution of dust and metal abundances in galaxies with the help of a dynamical, one-zone model that incorporates dust formation and destruction processes in addition to gas inflows, outflows, and metal enrichment. The dynamical model is consistent with various observational constraints, including the stellar mass --…
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