We have used a numerical simulation of a turbulent cloud to synthesize maps
of the thermal emission from dust at a variety of far-IR and sub-mm
wavelengths. The average column density and external radiation field in the
simulation is well matched to clouds such as Perseus and Ophiuchus. We use
pairs of single-wavelength emission maps to derive the dust color temperature
and column density, and we compare the derived column densities with the true
column density. We demonstrate that longer wavelength emission maps yield less
biased estimates of column density than maps made towards the peak of the dust
emission spectrum. We compare the scatter in the derived column density with
the observed scatter in Perseus and Ophiuchus. We find that while in Perseus
all of the observed scatter in the emission-derived versus the
extinction-derived column density can be attributed to the flawed assumption of
isothermal dust along each line of sight, in Ophiuchus there is additional
scatter above what can be explained by the isothermal assumption. Our results
imply that variations in dust emission properties within a molecular cloud are
not necessarily a major source of uncertainty in column density measurements.Comment: Accepted to ApJ Letter