Mantle formation, coagulation and the origin of cloud/core-shine: II. Comparison with observations
N. Ysard, M. Koehler, A.P. Jones, E. Dartois, M. Godard, L. Gavilan

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that the THEMIS dust model can self-consistently reproduce near-IR to submm observations of Cloudshine and Coreshine in dense interstellar clouds by incorporating dust evolution processes like mantle formation and coagulation.
Contribution
The paper introduces an advanced dust evolution model, THEMIS, capable of explaining C-shine observations across multiple wavelengths in dense clouds, integrating physical dust growth processes.
Findings
The THEMIS model successfully reproduces C-shine observations.
Dust scattering and emission depend strongly on cloud density and profile.
Aliphatic-rich mantle formation and coagulation explain observed IR emissions.
Abstract
Many dense interstellar clouds are observable in emission in the near-IR, commonly referred to as "Cloudshine", and in the mid-IR, the so-called "Coreshine". These C-shine observations have usually been explained with grain growth but no model has yet been able to self-consistently explain the dust spectral energy distribution from the near-IR to the submm. We want to demonstrate the ability of our new core/mantle evolutionary dust model THEMIS (The Heterogeneous dust Evolution Model at the IaS), which has been shown to be valid in the far-IR and submm, to reproduce the C-shine observations. Our starting point is a physically motivated core/mantle dust model. It consists of 3 dust populations: small aromatic-rich carbon grains; bigger core/mantle grains with mantles of aromatic-rich carbon and cores either made of amorphous aliphatic-rich carbon or amorphous silicate. We assume an…
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