Constraint on dust evolution processes in normal galaxies at $z>6$ detected by ALMA
W.-C. Wang, H. Hirashita, and K.-C. Hou

TL;DR
This study uses a theoretical dust evolution model constrained by ALMA observations of high-redshift galaxies to explore dust enrichment processes, revealing the importance of condensation efficiency and dust growth in early galaxy evolution.
Contribution
It provides new constraints on dust formation and growth processes in normal galaxies at z>6 based on ALMA data, highlighting the roles of condensation efficiency and metal enrichment.
Findings
High condensation efficiency can explain dust flux without strong growth.
Strong dust growth is necessary if condensation efficiency is low.
High dust enrichment may result from rapid metal accumulation or efficient dust growth.
Abstract
Recent ALMA observations of high-redshift normal galaxies have been providing a great opportunity to clarify the general origin of dust in the Universe, not biased to very bright special objects even at . To clarify what constraint we can get for the dust enrichment in normal galaxies detected by ALMA, we use a theoretical model that includes major processes driving dust evolution in a galaxy; that is, dust condensation in stellar ejecta, dust growth by the accretion of gas-phase metals, and supernova destruction. Using the dust emission fluxes detected in two normal galaxies at by ALMA as a constraint, we can get the range of the time-scales (or efficiencies) of the above mentioned processes. We find that if we assume extremely high condensation efficiency in stellar ejecta (), rapid dust enrichment by stellar sources in the early phase may be enough…
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