The Small Magellanic Cloud Investigation of Dust and Gas Evolution (SMIDGE): The Dust Extinction Curve from Red Clump Stars
Petia Yanchulova Merica-Jones, Karin M. Sandstrom, L. Clifton Johnson,, Julianne Dalcanton, Andrew E. Dolphin, Karl Gordon, Julia Roman-Duval, Daniel, R. Weisz, Benjamin F. Williams

TL;DR
This study measures the dust extinction curve in a region of the Small Magellanic Cloud using HST data, revealing the influence of stellar depth on extinction measurements and refining our understanding of dust properties beyond the Milky Way.
Contribution
The paper introduces a method to account for line-of-sight stellar depth when measuring dust extinction curves in nearby galaxies, improving accuracy over previous estimates.
Findings
Measured an extinction curve with R_475 = 2.65 ± 0.11.
Line-of-sight depth explains apparent gray dust without needing additional dust components.
Demonstrated broad-band HST imaging's effectiveness in constraining dust and galactic structure.
Abstract
We use Hubble Space Telescope (HST) observations of red clump stars taken as part of the Small Magellanic Cloud Investigation of Dust and Gas Evolution (SMIDGE) program to measure the average dust extinction curve in a ~ 200 pc x 100 pc region in the southwest bar of the Small Magellanic Cloud (SMC). The rich information provided by our 8-band ultra-violet through near-infrared photometry allows us to model the color-magnitude diagram of the red clump accounting for the extinction curve shape, a log-normal distribution of , and the depth of the stellar distribution along the line of sight. We measure an extinction curve with = 2.65 0.11. This measurement is significantly larger than the equivalent values of published Milky Way = 3.1 () and SMC Bar = 2.74 () extinction curves. Similar…
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