A&A 388, 439-445 (2002)
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:20020605
Dust-to-gas ratio and star formation history of blue compact dwarf galaxies
H. Hirashita1, Y. Y. Tajiri2 and H. Kamaya21 Osservatorio Astrofisico di Arcetri, Largo E. Fermi, 5, 50125 Firenze, Italy
2 Department of Astronomy, Faculty of Science, Kyoto University, Sakyo-ku, Kyoto 606-8502, Japan
e-mail: tajiri, kamaya@kusastro.kyoto-u.ac.jp
(Received 25 July 2001 / Accepted 29 March 2002 )
Abstract
This paper investigates the origin of the observed large variety in
dust-to-gas ratio,
, among blue compact dwarf galaxies
(BCDs). By applying our chemical evolution model, we find that
the dust destruction can largely suppress the dust-to-gas ratio
when the metallicity
of a BCD reaches
, i.e., a typical
metallicity level of BCDs. We also show that dust-to-gas ratio is
largely varied owing to the change of dust destruction efficiency
that has two effects: (i) a
significant contribution of Type Ia supernovae to total supernova
rate; (ii) variation of gas mass contained in a star-forming region.
While mass loss from BCDs was previously thought to be the major cause
for the variance of
, we suggest that the other two effects are
also important.
We finally discuss the intermittent star formation history, which
naturally explains the large dispersion of dust-to-gas ratio among
BCDs.
Key words: ISM: dust, extinction -- galaxies: dwarf -- galaxies: evolution -- galaxies: ISM -- stars: formation
Offprint request: H. Hirashita, irasita@arcetri.astro.it
SIMBAD Objects
© ESO 2002

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