A&A 388, 446-457 (2002)
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:20020515
Mapping the submillimeter spiral wave in NGC 6946
P. B. Alton1, S. Bianchi2, J. Richer3, D. Pierce-Price3 and F. Combes41 Department of Physics & Astronomy, University of Wales, PO Box 913, Cardiff CF2 3YB, UK
2 ESO, Karl-Schwarzschild-Strasse 2, 85748 Garching bei Muenchen, Germany
3 Cavendish Radio Laboratory, Madingley Road, Cambridge, UK
4 LERMA, Observatoire de Paris, 61 avenue de l'Observatoire, 75014 Paris, France
(Received 19 March 2001 / Accepted 4 April 2002 )
Abstract
We have analysed SCUBA
m images of the (near) face-on spiral galaxy NGC 6946,
paying particular attention to the subtraction of sky signal. A comparison with both 21 cm HI
and
12CO(2-1) intensity maps reveals a tight correlation between dust thermal emission
and molecular gas at the kiloparsec level. By means of a Monte Carlo radiative transfer
model, we convert a
B-K colour image of NGC 6946 into a map of visual optical depth. The
model yields maximum opacities since we assume that any increase in
B-K colour, with
respect to the disk edge, is attributable solely to extinction by dust. The resultant map of
visual optical depth relates well to the distribution of neutral gas (HI+H
2) and implies
a global gas-to-dust ratio of 90 (this value
is a lower limit). There is no significant radial variation of
this ratio: this can be understood, since the gas content is dominated by far by the molecular
gas. The latter is estimated through the CO emission tracer, which is itself dependent on
metallicity, similarly to dust emission. In the absence of a more objective tracer,
it is not possible to derive the true gas-to-dust ratio.
By comparing the radial profile of our visual optical depth map
with that of the SCUBA image, we infer an emissivity (dust absorption coefficient) at
m that is 3 times lower than the value measured by COBE in the Milky Way,
and 9 times lower than in NGC 891.
We view this very much as a lower estimate, however, given our initial assumptions in deriving
the visual opacity,
and the possibility of underestimating the large-scale submm emission,
the effect being more severe for the nearly face-on orientation of NGC 6946.
A decomposition of the spiral structure half way out along the disk of
NGC 6946 suggests an interarm optical depth of between 1 and 2. These surprisingly high
values represent 40-80% of the visual opacity that we measure for the arm region.
Key words: galaxies: general -- galaxies: individual: NGC 6946 -- galaxies: ISM -- galaxies: photometry -- galaxies: spiral -- radio continuum: galaxies
Offprint request: P. B. Alton, paul.alton@astro.cf.ac.uk
SIMBAD Objects
© ESO 2002

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