The apparent anti-correlation between the mass opacity of interstellar dust and the surface-density of interstellar gas

Abstract

Recent analyses of Herschel observations suggest that in nearby disc galaxies the dust mass opacity at 500 \, μ m, 500, decreases with increasing gas surface density, ISM (Clark et al. 2019). This apparent anti-correlation between 500 and ISM is opposite to the behaviour expected from theoretical dust evolution models; in such models, dust in denser, cooler regions (i.e. regions of increased ISM) tends to grow and therefore to have increased 500. We show, using a toy model, that the presence of a range of dust temperatures along the line of sight can lead to spuriously low estimated values of 500. If in regions of higher ISM the range of dust temperatures extends to lower values (as seems likely), the magnitude of this effect may be sufficient to explain the apparent anti-correlation between 500 and ISM. Therefore there may not be any need for spatial variation in the intrinsic dust properties that run counter to theoretical expectations.

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