# Dust-depletion sequences in damped Ly-{\alpha} absorbers II. The   composition of cosmic dust, from low-metallicity systems to the Galaxy

**Authors:** Lars Mattsson, Annalisa De Cia, Anja C. Andersen, Patrick Petitjean

arXiv: 1901.04710 · 2019-04-24

## TL;DR

This study investigates the composition of cosmic dust in various galactic environments, highlighting the significant roles of metallic iron and iron oxides, and finds little variation in dust composition across different metallicities.

## Contribution

It provides a computational analysis of dust composition in DLAs and the Galaxy, emphasizing iron-based dust species and excluding carbonaceous dust, which is a novel focus.

## Key findings

- Iron oxides constitute about 1/4 of oxygen-bearing dust.
- Metallic iron likely forms a significant mass fraction of dust.
- Dust composition shows little evolution from low-metallicity systems to the Galaxy.

## Abstract

We aim at assessing what are the most dominant dust species or types, including silicate and iron oxide grains present in the ISM, by using recent observations of dust depletion of galaxies at various evolutionary stages. We use the observed elemental abundances in dust of several metals (O, S, Si, Mg, and Fe) in different environments, considering systems with different metallicities and dust content, namely damped Lyman-{\alpha} absorbers (DLAs) towards quasars and the Galaxy. We derive a possible dust composition by computationally finding the statistically expected elemental abundances in dust assuming a set of key dust species with the iron content as a free parameter. Carbonaceous dust is not considered in the present study. Metallic iron (likely in the form of inclusions in silicate grains) and iron oxides is an important component of the mass composition of carbon-free dust. Iron oxides make up a significant mass fraction (~1/4 in some cases) of the oxygen-bearing dust and there are good reasons to believe that metallic iron constitutes a similar mass fraction of dust. W\"ustite (FeO) could be a simple explanation for the depletion of iron and oxygen because it is easily formed. There appears to be no silicate species clearly dominating the silicate mass, but rather a mix of iron-poor as well as iron-rich olivine and pyroxene. To what extent sulphur depletion is due to sulfides remains unclear. In general, there seems to be little evolution of the dust composition (not considering carbonaceous dust) from low-metallicity systems to the Galaxy.

## Full text

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## Figures

10 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1901.04710/full.md

## References

54 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1901.04710/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1901.04710