Abstract

Aims. We have explored the capabilities of dust extinction and γ rays to probe the properties of the interstellar medium in the nearby anti-centre region. In particular, we aim at quantifying the variations of the dust properties per gas nucleon across the different gas phases and different clouds. The comparison of dust extinction and emission properties with other physical quantities of large grains (emission spectral index β, dust colour temperature Tdust, total-to-selective extinction factor RV) helps the theoretical modelling of grains as they evolve from diffuse to dense cloud environments. Methods. We have jointly modelled the γ-ray intensity, recorded between 0.4 and 100 GeV with the Fermi Large Area Telescope (LAT), and the stellar reddening, E(B − V), inferred from Pan-STARRS and 2MASS photometry, as a combination of HI-bright, CO-bright, and ionised gas components. The complementary information from dust reddening and γ rays is used to reveal the gas not seen, or poorly traced, by HI, free-free, and 12CO emissions, namely (i) the opaque HI and diffuse H2 present in the dark neutral medium (DNM) at the atomic-molecular transition, and (ii) the dense H2 to be added where 12CO lines saturate (COsat). We compare the total gas column densities, NH, derived from the γ rays and stellar reddening with those inferred from a similar, previously published analysis of γ rays and of the optical depth of the thermal dust emission, τ353, at 353 GHz. We can therefore compare environmental variations in specific dust reddening, E(B − V)∕NH, and in dust emission opacity (dust optical depth per gas nucleon), τ353∕NH. Results. The gas column densities obtained when combining γ rays with either dust reddening or dust emission compare reasonably well in the atomic and DNM gas phases and over most of the CO-bright phase, but we find localised differences in the dense media (COsat component) due to differences in the two dust tracers. Over the whole anti-centre region, we find an average E(B − V)∕NH ratio of (2.02 ± 0.48) ×10−22 mag cm2, with maximum local variations of about ± 30% at variance with the two to six fold coincident increase seen in emission opacity as the gas column density increases. We show how the specific reddening and opacity vary with the colour temperature and spectral index of the thermal emission of the large grains. Additionally, we find a better agreement between the XCO = N(H2)/WCO conversion factors derived with dust reddening or with γ rays than with those inferred from dust emission, especially towards clouds with large τ353 optical depths. The comparison confirms that the high XCO values found with dust emission are biased by the significant rise in emission opacity inside molecular clouds. Conclusions. In the diffuse medium, we find only small variations in specific reddening, E(B − V)∕NH, compatible with the dispersion in the RV factor reported by other studies. This implies a relatively uniform dust-to-gas mass ratio in the diffuse parts of the anti-centre clouds. The small amplitude of the E(B − V)∕NH variations with increasing NH column density confirms that the large opacity τ353∕NH rise seen towards dense CO clouds is primarily due to changes in dust emissivity. The environmental changes are qualitatively compatible with model predictions based on mantle accretion on the grains and the formation of grain aggregates.

Highlights

  • Large dust grains in the interstellar medium (ISM) absorb starlight from the UV to near infrared domain causing appreciable extinction and reddening in stellar observations (Draine 2003)

  • We found that the opacity starts to increase in the dark neutral medium (DNM) at the HI –H2 transition, that is, at lower gas densities than the few thousand per cubic centimetre sampled in the bulk of the CO-bright volume

  • The large dust grains responsible for the stellar reddening at near-infrared (NIR) and optical wavelengths are taken to be well mixed with the interstellar gas, so we have modelled the spatial distributions of the E(B − V) reddening as a linear combination of gas column densities in the various phases and from the different cloud complexes

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Summary

Introduction

Large dust grains in the interstellar medium (ISM) absorb starlight from the UV to near infrared domain causing appreciable extinction and reddening in stellar observations (Draine 2003). In a more recent study (Planck Collaboration XI 2014), the emission measured with Planck and IRAS between 353 and 3000 GHz (100 to 850 μm) has been used to model the spectral energy distributions (SEDs) of the thermal emission and to derive an all-sky map of the dust optical depth in emission at 353 GHz, τ353 The latter relates to dust column density and grain emissivity. The opacity increase could be caused by an evolution of the grain properties changing their mass emission coefficient, as suggested by recent theoretical works (Köhler et al 2015), or by spatial variations in the dust-to-gas mass ratio The latter possibility impacts the relation between dust reddening and gas column density. The analysis region encompasses a variety of clouds, from diffuse and mostly atomic entities to dense molecular clouds forming stars at different rates, and spanning distances between 140 and 410 pc from the Sun (see Table 1 of Paper II: Remy et al 2018)

Dust emission and extinction
Gaseous components
Dust and γ-ray models
Mapping DNM and COsat components
Choice of analysis masks
Gas column density
Specific reddening and opacity variations
XCO factors
Discussion and conclusions
Dust evolution in the diffuse medium
Findings
Dust evolution in the molecular regions
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