Recently, Dunne et al. (2003) obtained 450 and 850 micron SCUBA images of
CasA, and reported the detection of 2-4 M_sun of cold, 18K, dust in the
remnant. Here we show that their interpretation of the observations faces
serious difficulties. Their inferred dust mass is larger than the mass of
refractory material in the ejecta of a 10 to 30 M_sun star. The cold dust model
faces even more difficulties if the 170 micron observations of the remnant are
included in the analysis, decreasing the cold dust temperature to ~ 8K, and
increasing its mass to > 20 M_sun. We offer here a more plausible
interpretation of their observation, in which the cold dust emission is
generated by conducting needles with properties that are completely determined
by the combined submillimeter and X-ray observations of the remnant. The
needles consist of metallic whiskers with <1% of embedded impurities that may
have condensed out of blobs of material that were expelled at high velocities
from the inner metal-rich layers of the star in an asymmetric explosion. The
needles are collisionally heated by the shocked gas to a temperature of 8K.
Taking the destruction of needles into account, a dust mass of only 1E-4 to
1E-3M_sun is needed to account for the observed SCUBA emission. Aligned in the
magnetic field, needles may give rise to observable polarized emission. The
detection of submillimeter polarization will therefore offer definitive proof
for a needle origin for the cold dust emission. Supernovae may still be proven
to be important sources of interstellar dust, but the evidence is still
inconclusive.Comment: 18 pages including 4 figures. Accepted for publication in the ApJ.
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