Submillimetre galaxies as laboratories for dust grain coagulation
Abstract
Coagulation in the dense interstellar medium (ISM) is an important process that determines the size of the largest grains. We use submillimetre galaxies (SMGs) as laboratories of grain coagulation, since some of them host the densest ISM on a galactic scale among various populations of galaxies known. We examine how large the grains can be in such dense environments based on the mean ISM density estimated from the observed typical dust mass density in SMGs. We also consider local density enhancement based on a model of supersonic turbulence, which is expected from strong stellar feedback. In the unlimited coagulation model, in which we do not impose any coagulation threshold velocity, grains as large as 30~μm can form under the observationally estimated mean gas density if the Mach number of turbulence is M 3. We exclude this possibility since the observed emissivity index β 2 in the far infrared (FIR) indicates that such large grains cannot actively form in SMGs. This means that coagulation does not proceed in an unlimited way: 30-μm grains should have velocities larger than the coagulation threshold. If we use a coagulation threshold (upper limit) grain velocity ( 0.08 km s-1) taken from a theoretical study, grains likely grow only up to μm size, which is small enough not to affect the FIR emissivity index. The above results indicate that SMGs can be used to constrain the physical processes relevant to coagulation.
Turn this paper into a full lesson
ArcXiv compiles a staged curriculum from this paper: 8-12 lessons across beginner → advanced, synthesised section guides, visuals, flashcards, a quiz, exercises, and on-demand deep dives per section. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.