Litcius/Paper detail

The dust mass in Cassiopeia A from infrared and optical line flux differences

Maria Niculescu-Duvaz, M. J. Barlow, Antonia Bevan, D. Milisavljević, I De Looze

2021Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society21 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

ABSTRACT The large quantities of dust that have been found in a number of high-redshift galaxies have led to suggestions that core-collapse supernovae (CCSNe) are the main sources of their dust and have motivated the measurement of the dust masses formed by local CCSNe. For Cassiopeia A (Cas A), an oxygen-rich remnant of a Type IIb CCSN, a dust mass of 0.6–1.1 M⊙ has already been determined by two different methods, namely (a) from its far-infrared spectral energy distribution and (b) from analysis of the red–blue emission line asymmetries in its integrated optical spectrum. We present a third, independent, method for determining the mass of dust contained within Cas A. This compares the relative fluxes measured in similar apertures from [O iii] far-infrared and visual-region emission lines, taking into account foreground dust extinction, in order to determine internal dust optical depths, from which corresponding dust masses can be obtained. Using this method, we determine a dust mass within Cas A of at least 0.99$^{+0.10}_{-0.09}$ M⊙.

Topics & Concepts

PhysicsCassiopeia ARedshiftAstrophysicsSpectral energy distributionInfraredExtinction (optical mineralogy)Cosmic dustCircumstellar dustFlux (metallurgy)Line (geometry)SupernovaGalaxyEmission spectrumSpectral lineSupernova remnantAstronomyOpticsChemistryGeometryMathematicsOrganic chemistryGamma-ray bursts and supernovaeAstrophysics and Star Formation StudiesGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena