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The Dust-to-Gas Ratio in the Small Magellanic Cloud Tail

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 Added by Karl D. Gordon
 Publication date 2008
  fields Physics
and research's language is English




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The Tail region of the Small Magellanic Cloud (SMC) was imaged using the MIPS instrument on the Spitzer Space Telescope as part of the SAGE-SMC Spitzer Legacy. Diffuse infrared emission from dust was detected in all the MIPS bands. The Tail gas-to-dust ratio was measured to be 1200 +/- 350 using the MIPS observations combined with existing IRAS and HI observations. This gas-to-dust ratio is higher than the expected 500-800 from the known Tail metallicity indicating possible destruction of dust grains. Two cluster regions in the Tail were resolved into multiple sources in the MIPS observations and local gas-to-dust ratios were measured to be ~440 and ~250 suggests dust formation and/or significant amounts of ionized gas in these regions. These results support the interpretation that the SMC Tail is a tidal tail recently stripped from the SMC that includes gas, dust, and young stars.



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In order to understand the evolution of the interstellar medium (ISM) of a galaxy, we have analysed the gas and dust budget of the Small Magellanic Cloud (SMC). Using the Spitzer Space Telescope, we measured the integrated gas mass-loss rate across asymptotic giant branch (AGB) stars and red supergiants (RSGs) in the SMC, and obtained a rate of 1.4x10^-3 Msun yr-1. This is much smaller than the estimated gas ejection rate from type II supernovae (SNe) (2-4x10^-2 Msun yr-1). The SMC underwent a an increase in starformation rate in the last 12 Myrs, and consequently the galaxy has a relatively high SN rate at present. Thus, SNe are more important gas sources than AGB stars in the SMC. The total gas input from stellar sources into the ISM is 2-4x10^-2 Msun yr-1. This is slightly smaller than the ISM gas consumed by starformation (~8x10^-2 Msun yr-1). Starformation in the SMC relies on a gas reservoir in the ISM, but eventually the starformation rate will decline in this galaxy, unless gas infalls into the ISM from an external source. The dust injection rate from AGB and RSG candidates is 1x10^-5 Msun yr-1. Dust injection from SNe is in the range of 0.2--11x10^-4 Msun yr-1, although the SN contribution is rather uncertain. Stellar sources could be important for ISM dust (3x10^5 Msun yr-1) in the SMC, if the dust lifetime is about 1.4 Gyrs. We found that the presence of poly-aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) in the ISM cannot be explained entirely by carbon-rich AGB stars. Carbon-rich AGB stars could inject only 7x10^-9 Msun yr-1 of PAHs at most, which could contribute up to 100 Msun of PAHs in the lifetime of a PAH. The estimated PAH mass of 1800 Msun in the SMC can not be explained. Additional PAH sources, or ISM reprocessing should be needed.
We investigate the kinematics of neutral gas in the Small Magellanic Cloud (SMC) and test the hypothesis that it is rotating in a disk. To trace the 3D motions of the neutral gas distribution, we identify a sample of young, massive stars embedded within it. These are stars with radial velocity measurements from spectroscopic surveys and proper motion measurements from Gaia, whose radial velocities match with dominant HI components. We compare the observed radial and tangential velocities of these stars with predictions from the state-of-the-art rotating disk model based on high-resolution 21 cm observations of the SMC from the Australian Square Kilometer Array Pathfinder telescope. We find that the observed kinematics of gas-tracing stars are inconsistent with disk rotation. We conclude that the kinematics of gas in the SMC are more complex than can be inferred from the integrated radial velocity field. As a result of violent tidal interactions with the LMC, non-rotational motions are prevalent throughout the SMC, and it is likely composed of distinct sub-structures overlapping along the line of sight.
We report the first evidence of molecular gas in two atomic hydrogen (HI) clouds associated with gas outflowing from the Small Magellanic Cloud (SMC). We used the Atacama Pathfinder Experiment (APEX) to detect and spatially resolve individual clumps of CO(2-1) emission in both clouds. CO clumps are compact (~ 10 pc) and dynamically cold (linewidths < 1 km/s). Most CO emission appears to be offset from the peaks of the HI emission, some molecular gas lies in regions without a clear HI counterpart. We estimate a total molecular gas mass of 10^3-10^4 Msun in each cloud and molecular gas fractions up to 30% of the total cold gas mass (molecular + neutral). Under the assumption that this gas is escaping the galaxy, we calculated a cold gas outflow rate of 0.3-1.8 Msun/yr and mass loading factors of 3 -12 at a distance larger than 1 kpc. These results show that relatively weak star-formation-driven winds in dwarf galaxies like the SMC are able to accelerate significant amounts of cold and dense matter and inject it into the surrounding environment.
121 - C. V. Rodrigues 1997
To elucidate the dust properties in the SMC we have for the first time measured linear polarization in five colors in the optical region of the spectrum for a sample of reddened stars. For two of these stars, for which there were no existing UV spectrophotometric measurements, but for which we measured a relatively large polarization, we have also obtained data from the International Ultraviolet Explorer (IUE) in order to study the extinction. The main results are: (1) the wavelength of maximum polarization, $lambda_{max}$, in the SMC is typically smaller than that in the Galaxy; (2) however, AZV 456, which shows the UV extinction bump, has a $lambda_{max}$ typical of that in the Galaxy, its polarization curve is narrower, its bump is shifted to shorter wavelengths as compared to the Galaxy and its UV extinction does not conform to the Galactic analytical interpolation curve based on the ratio of total to selective extinction; (3) the typical, monotonic SMC extinction curve can be best fit with amorphous carbon and silicate grains; (4) the extinction towards AZV456 may only be explained by assuming a larger gas-to-dust ratio than the observed N(HI)/A(V) value, with a small amount of the available carbon in graphite form; (5) from an analysis of both the extinction and polarization data and our model fits it appears that the SMC has typically smaller grains than those in the Galaxy.
We examine the three-dimensional structure and dust extinction properties in a ~ 200 pc $times$ 100 pc region in the southwest bar of the Small Magellanic Cloud (SMC). We model a deep Hubble Space Telescope optical color-magnitude diagram (CMD) of red clump and red giant branch stars to infer the dust extinction and galactic structure. We model the distance distribution of the stellar component with a Gaussian and find a centroid distance of 65.2 kpc (distance modulus $mu$ = 19.07 mag) with a FWHM $approx$ 11.3 kpc. This large extent along the line of sight reproduces results from previous studies using variable stars and red clump stars. Additionally, we find an offset between the stellar and dust distributions, with the dust on the near side relative to the stars by 3.22 $^{+1.69}_{-1.44}$ kpc, resulting in a 73% reddened fraction of stars. Modeling the dust layer with a log-normal $A_V$ distribution indicates a mean extinction $langle A_V rangle$ = 0.41 $pm$ 0.09 mag. We also calculate $A_V/N_H$ = 3.2 - 4.2 $times10^{-23}$ mag cm$^2$ H$^{-1}$ which is significantly lower than the Milky Way value but is comparable to previous SMC dust-to-gas ratio measurements. Our results yield the first joint dust extinction and 3D geometry properties in a key region in the SMC. This study demonstrates that CMD modeling can be a powerful tool to simultaneously constrain dust extinction and geometry properties in nearby galaxies.
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