Where's the Dust?: The Deepening Anomaly of Microwave Emission in NGC 4725 B
E. J. Murphy, B. S. Hensley, S. T. Linden, B. T. Draine, D. Dong, E., Momjian, G. Helou, and A. S. Evans

TL;DR
This study uses ALMA and VLA observations to analyze NGC 4725 B, revealing strong anomalous microwave emission likely from a young star cluster, but challenging spinning dust explanations and background galaxy hypotheses.
Contribution
First detailed multi-frequency analysis of NGC 4725 B, identifying its anomalous microwave emission and challenging existing dust emission models.
Findings
NGC 4725 B exhibits strong AME with no associated millimeter dust emission.
The spectrum includes synchrotron and free-free emission components.
The source is consistent with a young, massive star cluster undergoing active feedback.
Abstract
We present new Atacama Large Millimeter Array (ALMA) observations towards NGC 4725 B, a discrete, compact, optically-faint region within the star-forming disk of the nearby galaxy NGC 4725 that exhibits strong anomalous microwave emission (AME). These new ALMA data include continuum observations centered at 92, 133, 203, and 221 GHz accompanied by spectral observations of the CO () line. NGC 4725 B is detected in the continuum at all frequencies, although the detection at 203 GHz is marginal. While molecular gas is not detected at the exact location of NGC 4725 B, there is molecular gas in the immediate vicinity (i.e., pc) along with associated diffuse 8 m emission. When combined with existing Very Large Array continuum data at 1.5, 3, 5.5, 9, 14, 22, 33, and 44 GHz, the spectrum is best fit by a combination of AME, synchrotron, and free-free…
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