The fate of the interstellar medium in early-type galaxies. I. First direct measurement of the timescale of dust removal
Micha{\l} J. Micha{\l}owski, J. Hjorth, C. Gall, D. T. Frayer, A.-L., Tsai, H. Hirashita, K. Rowlands, T. T. Takeuchi, A. Le\'sniewska, D., Behrendt, N. Bourne, D. H. Hughes, E. Spring, J. Zavala, P. Bartczak

TL;DR
This study directly measures the dust removal timescale in early-type galaxies, finding it to be approximately 2.5 billion years, which informs models of galaxy evolution and star formation quenching.
Contribution
First observational measurement of dust removal timescale in early-type galaxies, providing a key parameter for galaxy evolution models.
Findings
Dust-to-stellar mass ratio declines exponentially with galaxy age.
Dust removal timescale is approximately 2.5 Gyr, with a half-life of 1.75 Gyr.
Dust is likely of internal origin, formed by supernovae and grain growth.
Abstract
An important aspect of quenching star formation is the removal of the cold interstellar medium (ISM; non-ionised gas and dust) from a galaxy. In addition, dust grains can be destroyed in a hot or turbulent medium. The adopted timescale of dust removal usually relies on uncertain theoretical estimates. It is tricky to track the dust removal, because usually dust is constantly replenished by consecutive generations of stars. Our objective is to measure observationally the timescale of dust removal. We here explore an approach to select galaxies which do have detectable amounts of dust and cold ISM but exhibit a low current dust production rate. Any decrease of the dust and gas content as a function of the age of such galaxies therefore must be attributed to processes governing the ISM removal. We used a sample of galaxies detected by Herschel in the far-infrared with visually assigned…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies
