Probing the Interstellar Dust in Galaxies over > 10 Gyr of Cosmic History
Varsha P. Kulkarni, Monique C. Aller, Donald G. York, Daniel E. Welty,, Giovanni Vladilo, Debopam Som

TL;DR
This paper investigates the evolution of interstellar dust in galaxies over more than 10 billion years using multi-wavelength observations of distant quasars, revealing differences in dust properties across cosmic time.
Contribution
It provides new observational constraints on dust grain properties in distant galaxies, highlighting differences from local dust and their implications for galaxy evolution.
Findings
Dust in distant galaxies shows different structure and composition from Milky Way dust.
Correlation between silicate absorption and reddening indicates dust properties evolve over time.
Evidence suggests variations in dust crystallinity and grain structure with redshift.
Abstract
This article is based on an invited talk given by V. P. Kulkarni at the 8th Cosmic Dust meeting. Dust has a profound effect on the physics and chemistry of the interstellar gas in galaxies and on the appearance of galaxies. Understanding the cosmic evolution of dust with time is therefore crucial for understanding the evolution of galaxies. Despite the importance of interstellar dust, very little is known about its nature and composition in distant galaxies. We summarize the results of our ongoing programs using observations of distant quasars to obtain better constraints on dust grains in foreground galaxies that happen to lie along the quasar sightlines. These observations consist of a combination of mid-infrared data obtained with the Spitzer Space Telescope and optical/UV data obtained with ground-based telescopes and/or the Hubble Space Telescope. The mid-IR data target the 10…
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