DustPedia and Local Volume Legacy samples as benchmarks for dust evolution in galaxies
Evangelos D. Paspaliaris, Simone Bianchi, Edvige Corbelli, Angelos Nersesian, Frédéric Galliano + 6 more
TLDR
This paper combines DustPedia and LVL samples to reveal non-monotonic dust-to-stellar mass ratios and their drivers across galaxy populations.
Key contributions
- Combines DustPedia and LVL datasets, creating a comprehensive sample of 1011 local galaxies for dust evolution studies.
- Reveals a non-monotonic trend in specific dust mass ($sM_{\rm dust}$) with stellar mass ($M_*$), showing distinct regimes.
- Links the $sM_{\rm dust}$-$M_*$ trend to initial gas mass and the $sM_{\rm dust}$-sSFR trend to galaxy ages using chemical models.
Why it matters
Understanding dust evolution is crucial for galaxy formation models. This work provides robust observational benchmarks by combining two major surveys, revealing complex relationships between dust content, stellar mass, and star formation. It offers new insights into the physical processes governing dust in diverse galaxy types.
Original Abstract
DustPedia and LVL are two samples representative of the local galaxy population, including in total 1011 unique objects of all morphological types, with a wide range of stellar masses ($M_*$) and star-formation activity, and a spectral coverage from the FUV to the FIR. The purpose of this work is to show that these samples cover two complementary ranges in $M_*$ and morphology, making them an ideal set for constraining the dominant processes in the evolution of the galactic dust content. Using the multiwavelength data provided by the two surveys, we fitted the galaxies' spectral energy distribution and estimated their physical properties, in particular the $M_*$, $sM_\mathrm{dust}=M_\mathrm{dust}/M_*$, and sSFR = SFR$/M_*$. By combining DustPedia and LVL, we highlight that the $\log_{10}(sM_{\rm dust})$-$\log_{10}(M_*)$ trend is not monotonic. Thanks to a large number of objects across a wide range of $M_*$, we have been able to fit two smoothly-joined linear correlations: a positive for $\log_{10}(M_{*}/$M$_\odot)\lesssim9.5$ (mainly LVL late spirals and irregulars), and a negative one for larger-mass, mainly DustPedia spirals (early types are distinct and more dispersed in the same mass regime). For $\log_{10}(M_{*}/$M$_\odot)>9.5$, we confirm a strong sM_{\rm dust}-sSFR correlation; dwarf galaxies, instead, lie below this trend, with a large scatter of $sM_{\rm dust}$, for -10.5<$\log_{10}$(sSFR/yr$^{-1}$)<-9.0. By using chemical evolution models we find that the observed $\log_{10}(sM_{\rm dust})$-$\log_{10}(M_{*})$ and $\log_{10}(sM_{\rm dust})$-$\log_{10}$(sSFR) trends can be interpreted mainly by variations in the initial gas mass budget and the galaxy ages, respectively. Low-mass Sm-Irr galaxies with low $sM_{\rm dust}$ and high sSFR can only be reproduced by the models by assuming high photofragmentation rate of large grains, and/or low grain-growth in clouds.
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