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Dust depletion of metals from local to distant galaxies I: Peculiar nucleosynthesis effects and grain growth in the ISM

Authors :
Konstantopoulou, Christina
De Cia, Annalisa
Krogager, Jens-Kristian
Ledoux, Cédric
Noterdaeme, Pasquier
Fynbo, Johan P. U.
Heintz, Kasper E.
Watson, Darach
Andersen, Anja C.
Ramburuth-Hurt, Tanita
Jermann, Iris
Source :
A&A 666, A12 (2022)
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Large fractions of metals are missing from the observable gas-phase in the interstellar medium (ISM) because they are incorporated into dust grains, a phenomenon called dust depletion. The study of dust depletion in the ISM is important to investigate the origin and evolution of metals and cosmic dust. Here we aim at characterizing the dust depletion of several metals from the Milky Way to distant galaxies. We collect ISM metal column densities from absorption-line spectroscopy in the literature, and in addition, we determine Ti and Ni column densities from a sample of 70 damped Lyman-$\alpha$ absorbers (DLAs) towards quasars, observed with UVES/VLT. We use ISM relative abundances to estimate the dust depletion of 18 metals (C, P, O, Cl, Kr, S, Ge, Mg, Si, Cu, Co, Mn, Cr, Ni, Al, Ti, Zn and Fe) for different environments (the Milky Way, the Magellanic Clouds (MCs), DLAs towards quasars and towards gamma-ray bursts). We observe linear relations between the depletion of each metal and the strength of dust depletion, which we trace with the observed [Zn/Fe]. In the neutral ISM of the MCs we find small deviations from linearity observed as an overabundance of the $\alpha$-elements Ti, Mg, S and an underabundance of Mn. The deviations disappear if we assume that all OB stars observed towards the MCs in our sample have an $\alpha$-element enhancement and Mn underabundance. This may imply that the MCs have been recently enriched in $\alpha$-elements, potentially due to recent bursts of star formation. The observed strong correlations of the depletion sequences of the metals all the way from low metallicity QSO-DLAs to the Milky Way suggest that cosmic dust has a common origin, independently of the star formation history, which varies significantly between these different galaxies. This supports the importance of grain growth in the ISM as a significant process of dust production.<br />Comment: 30 pages, 35 figures, 12 tables, Accepted for publication in A&A, Abstract abridged for arXiv

Details

Database :
arXiv
Journal :
A&A 666, A12 (2022)
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2207.08804
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/202243994