ISM Properties in Low-Metallicity Environments III. The Dust Spectral Energy Distributions of II Zw 40, He 2-10 and NGC 1140
F. Galliano, S. C. Madden, A. P. Jones, C. D. Wilson, J.-P. Bernard

TL;DR
This study models the dust spectral energy distributions of low-metallicity dwarf galaxies, revealing unique dust properties such as small grain sizes, a millimeter excess due to very cold dust, and altered extinction curves compared to the Milky Way.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed modeling of dust in these galaxies, highlighting differences in dust composition, size, and extinction features relative to higher-metallicity environments.
Findings
Low PAH abundance likely due to destruction by intense radiation.
Presence of very cold dust (5-9 K) accounting for up to 80% of dust mass.
Higher gas-to-dust ratios compared to the Milky Way.
Abstract
We present new 450 and 850 micron SCUBA data and 1.3 mm MAMBO data of the dwarf galaxies II Zw 40, He 2-10 and NGC 1140. Additional ISOCAM, IRAS as well as ground based data are used to construct the observed mid-infrared to millimeter spectral energy distribution of these galaxies. These spectral energy distributions are modeled in a self-consistent way, as was achieved with NGC 1569 (Galliano et al., 2003), synthesizing both the global stellar radiation field and the dust emission, with further constraints provided by the photoionisation of the gas. Our study shows that low-metallicity galaxies have very different dust properties compared to the Galaxy. Our main results are: (i) a paucity of PAHs which are likely destroyed by the hard penetrating radiation field, (ii) a very small (3-4 nm) average size of grains, consistent with the fragmentation and erosion of dust particles by the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
