Issue |
A&A
Volume 397, Number 1, January I 2003
|
|
---|---|---|
Page(s) | 201 - 212 | |
Section | Interstellar and circumstellar matter | |
DOI | https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361:20021433 | |
Published online | 11 December 2002 |
Dust emission from inhomogeneous interstellar clouds: Radiative transfer in 3D with transiently heated particles
1
Helsinki University Observatory, Tähtitorninmäki, PO Box 14, 00014 University of Helsinki, Finland
2
Jet Propulsion Laboratory, 4800 Oak Grove Drive, MS 169-506, California Institute of Technology, USA
Corresponding author: M. Juvela, mjuvela@astro.helsinki.fi
Received:
16
July
2002
Accepted:
30
September
2002
Due to the complexity of their structure, the theoretical study of
interstellar clouds must be based on three-dimensional models.
It is already possible to estimate the distribution
of equilibrium dust temperature in fairly large 3D models and, therefore, also
to predict the resulting far-infrared and sub-mm emission. Transiently heated
particles introduce, however, a significant complication and direct
calculation of emission at wavelengths below 100 μm is currently not
possible in 3D models consisting of millions of cells.
Nevertheless, the radiative transfer problem can be solved with some
approximations. We present a numerical code for continuum radiative transfer that is
based on the idea of a “library” describing the relation between the intensity
of the local radiation field and the resulting dust emission spectrum. Given
this mapping it is sufficient to simulate the radiation field at only a couple
of reference wavelengths. Based on the library and local intensities at the
reference wavelengths, the radiative transfer equation can be integrated
through the source and an approximation of the emission spectrum is obtained.
Tests with small models for which the radiative transfer problem can be solved
directly show that with our method, one can easily obtain an accuracy of a few
per cent. This depends, however, on the opacity of the source and the type of
the radiation sources included.
As examples we show spectra computed from three-dimensional MHD simulations
containing up to 1283 cells. The models represent starless, inhomogeneous
interstellar clouds embedded in the normal interstellar radiation field.
The intensity ratios between IRAS bands show large variations that follow the
filamentary structure of the density distribution. The power law index of the
spatial power spectrum of the column density map is -2.8.
In infrared maps temperature variations increase the power at high spatial
frequencies, and in a model with average visual extinction the power law index varies between -2.5 and -2.7.
Assuming constant dust properties throughout the cloud, the IRAS ratio
decreases in densest cores only by a factor of ~4
compared with the value in diffuse medium. Observations have shown that in
reality the ratio can decrease twice as much even in optically thinner clouds.
This requires that most of the small grains are removed in these regions, and
possibly a modification of the properties of large grains.
Key words: ISM: clouds / infrared: ISM / radiative transfer
© ESO, 2003
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