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The ISOPHOT 170μm serendipity survey: I. Compact sources with galaxy associations
Author(s)
Stickel, Manfred
Lemke, Dietrich
Klaas, Ulrich
Beichman, Charles A.
Rowan-Robinson, Michael
Bogun, Stefan
Kessler, Martin F.
Richter, Gotthard M.
Abstract
The first set of compact sources observed in the ISOPHOT 170 μm Serendipity Survey is presented. From the slew data with low (I100μm ≤ 15 MJy/sr) cirrus background, 115 well-observed sources with a high signal-to-noise ratio in all detector pixels having a galaxy association were extracted. Of the galaxies with known optical morphologies, the vast majority are classified as spirals, barred spirals, or irregulars. The 170 μm fluxes measured from the Serendipity slews have been put on an absolute flux level by using calibration sources observed additionally with the photometric mapping mode of ISOPHOT. For all but a few galaxies, the 170 μm fluxes are determined for the first time, which represents a significant increase in the number of galaxies with measured Far-Infrared (FIR) fluxes beyond the IRAS 100 μm limit. The 170 μm fluxes cover the range 2 ≲ F170μm ≲ 100 Jy. Formulae for the integrated FIR fluxes F40-220μm and the total infrared fluxes F1-1000/μm incorporating the new 170 μm fluxes are provided. The large fraction of sources with a high F170μm/F100μm flux ratio indicates that a cold (T/Dust ≲ 20 K) dust component is present in many galaxies. The detection of such a cold dust component is crucial for the determination of the total dust mass in galaxies, and, in cases with a large F170μm/F100μm flux ratio, increases the dust mass by a significant factor. The typical mass of the coldest dust component is MDust = 107.5 ±0.5 M⊙, a factor 2-10 larger than that derived from IRAS fluxes alone. As a consequence, the majority of the derived gas-to-dust ratios are much closer to the canonical value of ≈ 160 for the Milky Way. By relaxing the selection cri-teria, it is expected that the Serendipity Survey will eventually lead to a catalog of 170 μm fluxes for ≈ 1000 galaxies.
Part Of
Astronomy and Astrophysics
Issue
3
Volume
359
Date Issued
2000-12-01
Open Access
No
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