The dust-to-metals ratio describes the fraction of heavy elements contained in dust grains, and its variation provides key insights into the life cycle of dust. We measure the dust-to-metals ratio in M101, a nearby galaxy with a radial metallicity ( Z ) gradient spanning ∼1 dex. We fit the spectral energy distribution of dust from 100 to 500 μ m with five variants of the modified blackbody dust emission model in which we vary the temperature distribution and how emissivity depends on wavelength. Among them, the model with a single-temperature blackbody modified by a broken power-law emissivity gives the statistically best fit and physically most plausible results. Using these results, we show that the dust-to-gas ratio is proportional to . This implies that the dust-to-metals ratio is not constant in M101, but decreases as a function of radius, which is equivalent to a lower fraction of metals trapped in dust at low metallicity (large radius). The dust-to-metals ratio in M101 remains at or above what would be predicted by the minimum depletion level of metals observed in the Milky Way. Our current knowledge of the metallicity-dependent CO-to-H 2 conversion factor suggests that variations in the conversion factor cannot be responsible for the trends in dust-to-metals ratio we observe. This change of dust-to-metals ratio is significantly correlated with the mass fraction of molecular hydrogen, which suggests that the accretion of gas-phase metals onto existing dust grains could contribute to a variable dust-to-metals ratio.
CITATION STYLE
Chiang 江, I.-D. 宜達, Sandstrom, K. M., Chastenet, J., Johnson, L. C., Leroy, A. K., & Utomo, D. (2018). The Spatially Resolved Dust-to-metals Ratio in M101. The Astrophysical Journal, 865(2), 117. https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/aadc5f
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