Abstract
Physical dust models are presented for 65 galaxies in SINGS that are strongly detected in the four IRAC bands and three MIPS bands. For each galaxy we estimate (1) the total dust mass, (2) the fraction of the dust mass contributed by PAHs, and (3) the intensity of the starlight heating the dust grains. We find that spiral galaxies have dust properties resembling the dust in the local region of the Milky Way, with similar dust-to-gas ratio and similar PAH abundance. The observed SEDs, including galaxies with SCUBA photometry, can be reproduced by dust models that do not require "cold" (T ≳ 10 K) dust. The dust-to-gas ratio is observed to be dependent on metallicity. In the interstellar media of galaxies with AO = 12 + log 10(O/H) > 8.1, grains contain a substantial fraction of interstellar Mg, Si, and Fe. Galaxies with AO < 8.1 and extended H I envelopes in some cases appear to have global dust-to-gas ratios that are low for their measured oxygen abundance, but the dust-to-gas ratio in the regions where infrared emission is detected generally appears to be consistent with a substantial fraction of interstellar Mg, Si, and Fe being contained in dust. The PAH index qpAH, the fraction of the dust mass in the form of PAHs, correlates with metallicity. The nine galaxies in our sample with AO < 8.1 have a median qPAH = 1.0%, whereas galaxies with A O > 8.1 have a median qPAH = 3.55%. The derived dust masses favor a value XCo ≈ 4 × 1020 cm -2 (K kms-1)-1 for the CO-to-H2 conversion factor. Except for some starbursting systems (Mrk 33, Toi 89, NGC 3049), dust in the diffuse ISM dominates the IR power.
Original language | English (US) |
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Pages (from-to) | 866-894 |
Number of pages | 29 |
Journal | Astrophysical Journal |
Volume | 663 |
Issue number | 2 I |
DOIs | |
State | Published - Jul 10 2007 |
All Science Journal Classification (ASJC) codes
- Astronomy and Astrophysics
- Space and Planetary Science
Keywords
- Dust, extinction
- Galaxies: ISM
- Galaxies: abundances
- Galaxies: general
- ISM: general
- Infrared: galaxies