Dust processing in elliptical galaxies
Hiroyuki Hirashita, Takaya Nozawa, Alexa Villaume, Sundar Srinivasan

TL;DR
This paper models dust evolution in elliptical galaxies, showing that dust destruction by sputtering is dominant, but grain growth in cold gas can increase dust to observed levels and explain extinction curve features.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive model of dust grain size evolution, including sputtering, cooling, and accretion, demonstrating the importance of grain growth in cold gas for dust abundance.
Findings
Dust destruction by sputtering is highly efficient in hot ISM.
Gas-phase metal accretion in cold gas can significantly increase dust mass.
Grain growth explains the steepness of observed extinction curves.
Abstract
We reconsider the origin and processing of dust in elliptical galaxies. We theoretically formulate the evolution of grain size distribution, taking into account dust supply from asymptotic giant branch (AGB) stars and dust destruction by sputtering in the hot interstellar medium (ISM), whose temperature evolution is treated by including two cooling paths: gas emission and dust emission (i.e. gas cooling and dust cooling). With our new full treatment of grain size distribution, we confirm that dust destruction by sputtering is too efficient to explain the observed dust abundance even if AGB stars continue to supply dust grains, and that, except for the case where the initial dust-to-gas ratio in the hot gas is as high as , dust cooling is negligible compared with gas cooling. However, we show that, contrary to previous expectations, cooling does not help to protect the dust;…
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