A systematic study of Galactic infrared bubbles along the Galactic plane with AKARI and Herschel. II. Spatial distributions of dust components around the bubbles
Misaki Hanaoka, Hidehiro Kaneda, Toyoaki Suzuki, Takuma Kokusho,, Shinki Oyabu, Daisuke Ishihara, Mikito Kohno, Takuya Furuta, Takuro, Tsuchikawa, Futoshi Saito

TL;DR
This study analyzes the spatial distribution of dust components around Galactic IR bubbles using AKARI and Herschel data, revealing regional differences in dust heating and star formation environments.
Contribution
It provides a detailed pixel-by-pixel spectral energy distribution analysis of 165 IR bubbles, highlighting regional variations in dust properties and their relation to star formation.
Findings
Inner Galactic bubbles show larger offsets of dust heating sources.
Inner Galactic regions have greater spatial variation in PAH and cold dust emissions.
Broken bubbles in inner regions often have large angles between offsets and shell directions.
Abstract
Galactic infrared (IR) bubbles, which can be seen as shell-like structures at mid-IR wavelengths, are known to possess massive stars within their shell boundaries. In our previous study, Hanaoka et al. (2019) expanded the research area to the whole Galactic plane (, ) and studied systematic differences in the shell morphology and the IR luminosity of the IR bubbles between inner and outer Galactic regions. In this study, utilizing high spatial-resolution data of AKARI and WISE in the mid-IR and Herschel in the far-IR, we investigate the spatial distributions of dust components around each IR bubble to discuss the relation between the star-formation activity and the dust properties of the IR bubbles. For the 247 IR bubbles studied in Hanaoka et al. (2019), 165 IR bubbles are investigated in this study, which have the Herschel data…
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