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High Molecular-Gas to Dust Mass Ratios Predicted in Most Quiescent Galaxies

Authors :
Whitaker, Katherine E.
Narayanan, Desika
Williams, Christina C.
Li, Qi
Spilker, Justin S.
Davé, Romeel
Akhshik, Mohammad
Akins, Hollis B.
Bezanson, Rachel
Katz, Neal
Leja, Joel
Magdis, Georgios E.
Mowla, Lamiya
Nelson, Erica J.
Pope, Alexandra
Privon, George C.
Toft, Sune
Valentino, Francesco
Whitaker, Katherine E.
Narayanan, Desika
Williams, Christina C.
Li, Qi
Spilker, Justin S.
Davé, Romeel
Akhshik, Mohammad
Akins, Hollis B.
Bezanson, Rachel
Katz, Neal
Leja, Joel
Magdis, Georgios E.
Mowla, Lamiya
Nelson, Erica J.
Pope, Alexandra
Privon, George C.
Toft, Sune
Valentino, Francesco
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Observations of cold molecular gas reservoirs are critical for understanding the shutdown of star formation in massive galaxies. While dust continuum is an efficient and affordable tracer, this method relies upon the assumption of a "normal" molecular-gas to dust mass ratio, $\delta_{\mathrm{GDR}}$, typically of order one hundred. Recent null detections of quiescent galaxies in deep dust continuum observations support a picture where the cold gas and dust has been rapidly depleted or expelled. In this work, we present another viable explanation: a significant fraction of galaxies with low star formation per unit stellar mass are predicted to have extreme $\delta_{\mathrm{GDR}}$ ratios. We show that simulated massive quiescent galaxies at $0 < z < 3$ in the \textsc{simba} cosmological simulations have $\delta_{\mathrm{GDR}}$ values that extend $>$4 orders of magnitude. The dust in most simulated quiescent galaxies is destroyed significantly more rapidly than the molecular gas depletes, and cannot be replenished. The transition from star-forming to quiescent halts dust formation via star formation processes, with dust subsequently destroyed by supernova shocks and thermal sputtering of dust grains embedded in hot plasma. After this point, the dust growth rate in the models is not sufficient to overcome the loss of $>$3 orders of magnitude in dust mass to return to normal values of $\delta_{\mathrm{GDR}}$ despite having high metallicity. Our results indicate that it is not straight forward to use a single observational indicator to robustly pre-select exotic versus normal ratios. These simulations make strong predictions that can be tested with millimeter facilities.<br />Comment: 9 pages, 5 figures, version accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal Letters

Details

Database :
OAIster
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1363555757
Document Type :
Electronic Resource
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3847.2041-8213.ac399f