5 research outputs found
Gas-to-Dust mass ratios in local galaxies over a 2 dex metallicity range
This paper analyses the behaviour of the gas-to-dust mass ratio (G/D) of
local Universe galaxies over a large metallicity range. We combine three
samples: the Dwarf Galaxy Survey, the KINGFISH survey and a subsample from
Galametz et al. (2011) totalling 126 galaxies, covering a 2 dex metallicity
range, with 30% of the sample with 12+log(O/H) < 8.0. The dust masses are
homogeneously determined with a semi-empirical dust model, including submm
constraints. The atomic and molecular gas masses are compiled from the
literature. Two XCO are used to estimate molecular gas masses: the Galactic
XCO, and a XCO depending on the metallicity (as Z^{-2}). Correlations with
morphological types, stellar masses, star formation rates and specific star
formation rates are discussed. The trend between G/D and metallicity is
empirically modelled using power-laws (slope of -1 and free) and a broken
power-law. We compare the evolution of the G/D with predictions from chemical
evolution models. We find that out of the five tested galactic parameters,
metallicity is the galactic property driving the observed G/D. The G/D versus
metallicity relation cannot be represented by a power-law with a slope of -1
over the whole metallicity range. The observed trend is steeper for
metallicities lower than ~ 8.0. A large scatter is observed in the G/D for a
given metallicity, with a dispersion of 0.37 dex in metallicity bins of ~0.1
dex. The broken power-law reproduces best the observed G/D and provides
estimates of the G/D that are accurate to a factor of 1.6. The good agreement
of the G/D and its scatter with the three tested chemical evolution models
shows that the scatter is intrinsic to galactic properties, reflecting the
different star formation histories, dust destruction efficiencies, dust grain
size distributions and chemical compositions across the sample. (abriged)Comment: 23 pages, 12 figures, accepted in Astronomy & Astrophysic