Herschel and SCUBA-2 observations of dust emission in a sample of Planck cold clumps
Mika Juvela, Jinhua He, Katherine Pattle, Tie Liu, George Bendo, David, J. Eden, Orsolya Feher, Michel Fich, Gary Fuller, Naomi Hirano, Kee-Tae Kim,, Di Li, Sheng-Yuan Liu, Johanna Malinen, Douglas J. Marshall, Deborah Paradis,, Harriet Parsons, Veli-Matti Pelkonen

TL;DR
This study analyzes dust emission in Galactic cold clumps using multi-wavelength data from Planck, Herschel, IRAS, and SCUBA-2 to understand dust properties and spectral energy distribution variations across different scales.
Contribution
It provides new measurements of dust spectral energy distributions in cold clumps, combining data from multiple observatories and comparing large and small-scale structures.
Findings
Most clumps have dust temperatures around 14-18K.
The dust opacity spectral index beta is approximately 1.7.
Evidence of spectrum flattening at wavelengths longer than 500um.
Abstract
Analysis of all-sky Planck submillimetre observations and the IRAS 100um data has led to the detection of a population of Galactic cold clumps. The clumps can be used to study star formation and dust properties in a wide range of Galactic environments. Our aim is to measure dust spectral energy distribution (SED) variations as a function of the spatial scale and the wavelength. We examine the SEDs at large scales using IRAS, Planck, and Herschel data. At smaller scales, we compare with JCMT/SCUBA-2 850um maps with Herschel data that are filtered using the SCUBA-2 pipeline. Clumps are extracted using the Fellwalker method and their spectra are modelled as modified blackbody functions. According to IRAS and Planck data, most fields have dust colour temperatures T_C ~ 14-18K and opacity spectral index values of beta=1.5-1.9. The clumps/cores identified in SCUBA-2 maps have T~ 13K and…
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