Investigating the interstellar dust through the Fe K-edge
D. Rogantini (1, 2), E. Costantini (1), S.T. Zeegers (1, 3),, C.P. de Vries (1), W. Bras (4), F. de Groot (5), H. Mutschke (6), L.B.F.M., Waters (1, 2) ((1) SRON, (2) API, University of Amsterdam, (3) Leiden, Observatory, (4) NWO, DUBBLE at ESRF (5) Debye Institute

TL;DR
This study explores the potential of high-resolution X-ray spectroscopy, particularly the Fe K-edge, to analyze the composition and size of interstellar dust grains containing iron, despite current observational limitations.
Contribution
It demonstrates that Fe K-edge spectral features can reveal dust chemistry and grain size, providing a new method for studying interstellar dust properties.
Findings
Fe K-edge features depend on dust chemistry and grain size.
Current X-ray telescopes lack sufficient resolution to detect these features.
Fe K-edge is insensitive to dust porosity and geometry.
Abstract
The chemical and physical properties of interstellar dust in the densest regions of the Galaxy are still not well understood. X-rays provide a powerful probe since they can penetrate gas and dust over a wide range of column densities (up to ). The interaction (scattering and absorption) with the medium imprints spectral signatures that reflect the individual atoms which constitute the gas, molecule, or solid. In this work we investigate the ability of high resolution X-ray spectroscopy to probe the properties of cosmic grains containing iron. Although iron is heavily depleted into interstellar dust, the nature of the Fe-bearing grains is still largely uncertain. In our analysis we use iron K-edge synchrotron data of minerals likely present in the ISM dust taken at the European Synchrotron Radiation Facility. We explore the prospects of determining the chemical…
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