A submillimeter exponential disk in M 51: Evidence for an extended cold dust disk
/ Authors
/ Abstract
Received ????; accepted ???? Abstract. A 850 µm map of the interacting spiral galaxy M 51 shows well-defined spiral arms, closely resembling the struc- tures seen in CO and HI emission. However, most of the 850 µm emission originates in an underlying exponential disk, a component that has not been observed before in a face-on galaxy at these wavelengths. The scale-length of this disk is 5.45 kpc, which is somewhat larger than the scale-length of the stellar disk, but somewhat smaller than that of atomic hydrogen. Its profile can not be explained solely by a radial disk temperatu re gradient but requires the underlying dust to have an exponential distribution as well. This reinforces the view that the submm emission from spiral galaxy disks traces total hydrogen column density, i.e. the sum of H2 and H I. A canonical gas-to-dust ratio of 100±26 is obtained for �850 = 1.2 g −1 cm 2 , where �850 is the dust opacity at 850 µm.
Journal: Astronomy and Astrophysics