TY - JOUR
T1 - On the Interpretation of Far-infrared Spectral Energy Distributions. I. the 850 μm Molecular Mass Estimator
AU - Privon, G. C.
AU - Narayanan, D.
AU - Davé, R.
PY - 2018/11/5
Y1 - 2018/11/5
N2 - We use a suite of cosmological zoom galaxy formation simulations and dust radiative transfer calculations to explore the use of the monochromatic 850 μm luminosity (L ν,850) as a molecular gas mass (M mol) estimator in galaxies between 0 < z < 9.5 for a broad range of masses. For our fiducial simulations, where we assume that the dust mass is linearly related to the metal mass, we find that empirical L ν,850-M mol calibrations accurately recover the molecular gas mass of our model galaxies and that the L ν,850-dependent calibration is preferred. We argue that the major driver of scatter in the L ν,850-M mol relation arises from variations in the molecular gas-to-dust mass ratio, rather than variations in the dust temperature, in agreement with the previous study of Liang et al. Emulating a realistic measurement strategy with ALMA observing bands that are dependent on the source redshift, we find that estimating S ν,850 from continuum emission at a different frequency contributes 10%-20% scatter to the L ν,850-M mol relation. This additional scatter arises from a combination of mismatches in assumed T dust and β values, as well as the fact that the SEDs are not single-temperature blackbodies. However, this observationally induced scatter is a subdominant source of uncertainty. Finally, we explore the impact of a dust prescription in which the dust-to-metals ratio varies with metallicity. Though the resulting mean dust temperatures are ∼50% higher, the dust mass is significantly decreased for low-metallicity halos. As a result, the observationally calibrated L ν,850-M mol relation holds for massive galaxies, independent of the dust model, but below L ν,850 ≲ 1028 erg s-1 (metallicities ) we expect that galaxies may deviate from literature observational calibrations by 0.5 dex.
AB - We use a suite of cosmological zoom galaxy formation simulations and dust radiative transfer calculations to explore the use of the monochromatic 850 μm luminosity (L ν,850) as a molecular gas mass (M mol) estimator in galaxies between 0 < z < 9.5 for a broad range of masses. For our fiducial simulations, where we assume that the dust mass is linearly related to the metal mass, we find that empirical L ν,850-M mol calibrations accurately recover the molecular gas mass of our model galaxies and that the L ν,850-dependent calibration is preferred. We argue that the major driver of scatter in the L ν,850-M mol relation arises from variations in the molecular gas-to-dust mass ratio, rather than variations in the dust temperature, in agreement with the previous study of Liang et al. Emulating a realistic measurement strategy with ALMA observing bands that are dependent on the source redshift, we find that estimating S ν,850 from continuum emission at a different frequency contributes 10%-20% scatter to the L ν,850-M mol relation. This additional scatter arises from a combination of mismatches in assumed T dust and β values, as well as the fact that the SEDs are not single-temperature blackbodies. However, this observationally induced scatter is a subdominant source of uncertainty. Finally, we explore the impact of a dust prescription in which the dust-to-metals ratio varies with metallicity. Though the resulting mean dust temperatures are ∼50% higher, the dust mass is significantly decreased for low-metallicity halos. As a result, the observationally calibrated L ν,850-M mol relation holds for massive galaxies, independent of the dust model, but below L ν,850 ≲ 1028 erg s-1 (metallicities ) we expect that galaxies may deviate from literature observational calibrations by 0.5 dex.
KW - galaxies: evolution
KW - galaxies: high-redshift
KW - galaxies: ISM
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85056724584&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.3847/1538-4357/aae485
DO - 10.3847/1538-4357/aae485
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85056724584
SN - 0004-637X
VL - 867
JO - Astrophysical Journal
JF - Astrophysical Journal
IS - 2
M1 - 102
ER -