The role of young and evolved stars in the heating of dust in local galaxies
Vidhi Tailor, Viviana Casasola, Francesca Pozzi, Francesco Calura, Simone Bianchi, Monica Relano, Jacopo Fritz, Fr\'ed\'eric Galliano, Matteo Bonato, Maritza A. Lara-L\'opez, Evangelos Dimitrios Paspaliaris, and Alberto Traina

TL;DR
This study investigates how young and evolved stars contribute to dust heating in nearby spiral galaxies, revealing that both stellar populations play significant roles with varying importance across different galaxies.
Contribution
It introduces a combined analysis approach to quantify the relative contributions of young and evolved stars to dust heating in spiral galaxies.
Findings
Both young and evolved stars significantly heat dust.
Dust temperature peaks at galaxy centers and decreases outward.
In 72% of cases, the dominant heating source is consistent across methods.
Abstract
Context. Dust is a fundamental component of the interstellar medium (ISM) and plays a critical role in galaxy evolution. Dust grains influence the ISM by cooling the gas, altering its chemistry, and absorbing stellar radiation, re-emitting it at longer wavelengths in the far-infrared (FIR) and sub-millimeter regimes. The cold dust component, which dominates the dust mass, is primarily heated by stellar radiation, including both young, massive stars and the diffuse emission from older stars. Understanding dust heating is essential to trace the connection between stellar populations and their environments. Aims. We aim to identify the dominant heating mechanisms of the cold dust in typical nearby spiral galaxies and explore the contributions of young and evolved stars to dust heating. Methods. Using 18 large, face-on spiral galaxies from the DustPedia project, we apply two…
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