Interstellar Extinction and Elemental Abundances: Individual Sight Lines
W.B. Zuo, Aigen Li, Gang Zhao

TL;DR
This study analyzes individual interstellar sight lines to understand dust properties and elemental depletions, revealing that most oxygen is accounted for and identifying shortages of other elements in dense regions.
Contribution
It provides a detailed modeling of extinction and elemental abundances along individual sight lines, highlighting environmental effects on dust composition and addressing the missing oxygen problem.
Findings
Most interstellar oxygen is accounted for by gas and dust.
In dense regions, there are shortages of C, Si, Mg, and Fe for dust formation.
Environmental effects influence dust properties and elemental depletions.
Abstract
While it is well recognized that both the Galactic interstellar extinction curves and the gas-phase abundances of dust-forming elements exhibit considerable variations from one sight line to another, as yet most of the dust extinction modeling efforts have been directed to the Galactic average extinction curve, which is obtained by averaging over many clouds of different gas and dust properties. Therefore, any details concerning the relationship between the dust properties and the interstellar environments are lost. Here we utilize the wealth of extinction and elemental abundance data obtained by space telescopes and explore the dust properties of a large number of individual sight lines. We model the observed extinction curve of each sight line and derive the abundances of the major dust-forming elements (i.e., C, O, Si, Mg and Fe) required to be tied up in dust (i.e., dust depletion).…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies
