Dense molecular cloud cores as a source of micrometer-sized grains in galaxies
Abstract
Coreshine in dense molecular cloud cores (dense cores) is interpreted as evidence for micrometer-sized grains (referred to as very large grains, VLGs). VLGs may have a significant influence on the total dust amount and the extinction curve. We estimate the total abundance of VLGs in the Galaxy, assuming that dense cores are the site of VLG formation. We find that the VLG abundance relative to the total dust mass is roughly φVLG 0.01(1-ε )/ε (τSF/5× 109~yr)-1 (fVLG/0.5)(tshat/108~yr), where ε is the star formation efficiency in dense cores, τSF the timescale of gas consumption by star formation, fVLG the fraction of dust mass eventually coagulated into VLGs in dense cores, and tshat the lifetime of VLGs (determined by shattering). Adopting their typical values for the Galaxy, we obtain φVLG 0.02--0.09. This abundance is well below the value detected in the heliosphere by Ulysses and Galileo, which means that local enhancement of VLG abundance in the solar neighborhood is required if the VLGs originate from dense cores. We also show that the effects of VLGs on the extinction curve are negligible even with the upper value of the above range, φVLG 0.09. If we adopt an extreme value, φVLG 0.5, close to that inferred from the above spacecraft data, the extinction curve is still in the range of the variation in Galactic extinction curves, but is not typical of the diffuse ISM.
Turn this paper into a lesson
ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.