The dust and cold gas content of local star forming galaxies
P. Popesso, A. Concas, L. Morselli, G. Rodighiero, A. Enia, S. Qua

TL;DR
This study investigates how dust and molecular gas content vary in local star-forming galaxies, revealing their dependence on stellar mass, position relative to the main sequence, and host halo mass, and explaining the main sequence bending.
Contribution
It introduces new proxies for dust and molecular gas masses based on galaxy properties and analyzes their distribution and dependence on galaxy and halo characteristics.
Findings
Dust and molecular gas increase with stellar mass along the main sequence.
The fraction of dust and gas decreases with increasing stellar mass.
Main sequence bending is linked to lower molecular gas in massive halos.
Abstract
We use dust masses () derived from far-infrared data and molecular gas masses () based on CO luminosity, to calibrate proxies based on a combination of the galaxy Balmer decrement, disk inclination and gas metallicity. We use such proxies to estimate and in the local SDSS sample of star-forming galaxies (SFGs). We study the distribution of and along and across the Main Sequence (MS) of SFGs. We find that and increase rapidly along the MS with increasing stellar mass (), and more marginally across the MS with increasing SFR (or distance from the relation). The dependence on is sub-linear for both and . Thus, the fraction of dust () and molecular gas mass () decreases monotonically towards large . The star formation efficiency (SFE, the inverse of the…
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