NGC4370: a case study for testing our ability to infer dust distribution and mass in nearby galaxies
S. Viaene, G. De Geyter, M. Baes, J. Fritz, G. J. Bendo, M. Boquien,, A. Boselli, S. Bianchi, L. Cortese, P. C\^ot\'e, J.-C. Cuillandre, I. De, Looze, S. di Serego Alighieri, L. Ferrarese, S. D. J. Gwyn, T. M. Hughes, and, C. Pappalardo

TL;DR
This study compares optical and FIR data to accurately determine dust mass in NGC 4370, revealing complex dust geometries and emphasizing the limitations of optical-only methods.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive approach combining optical, FIR, and radiative transfer models to better estimate dust content and distribution in galaxies.
Findings
Optical methods underestimate dust mass by an order of magnitude.
Radiative transfer models align well with FIR-derived dust masses.
Dust is distributed in a ring around NGC 4370's center.
Abstract
A fraction of the early-type galaxy population hosts a prominent dust lane. Methods to quantify the dust content of these systems based on optical imaging data usually yield dust masses which are an order of magnitude lower than dust masses derived from the observed FIR emission. High-quality optical data from the Next Generation Virgo cluster Survey (NGVS) and FIR/submm observations from the Herschel Virgo Cluster Survey (HeViCS) allow us to revisit previous methods to determine the dust content in galaxies and explore new ones. We aim to derive the dust mass in NGC 4370 from both optical and FIR data, and investigate the need to invoke a putative diffuse dust component. We create color and attenuation maps, which are converted to approximate dust mass maps based on simple dust geometries. Dust masses are also derived from SED fits to FIR/submm observations. Finally, inverse radiative…
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