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Paper: Interstellar Dust Models and Evolutionary Implications
Volume: 414, Cosmic Dust—Near and Far
Page: 453
Authors: Draine, B. T.
Abstract: The wavelength dependences of interstellar extinction and polarization, supplemented by observed elemental abundances and the spectrum of infrared emission from dust heated by starlight, strongly constrain dust models. One dust model that appears to be consistent with observations is presented. To reproduce the observed extinction, the model consumes the bulk of interstellar Mg, Si, and Fe (in amorphous silicates), and a substantial fraction of C (in carbonaceous material), with size distributions and alignment adjusted to match observations. The composition, structure, and size distribution of interstellar grains is the result of injection of dust from stellar outflows into the interstellar medium, followed by destruction, growth, coagulation, and photoprocessing of interstellar grains. The balance among these poorly-understood processes is responsible for the mix of solid material present in the ISM. Most interstellar grain material present in the diffuse interstellar medium must be grown in the interstellar medium. The amorphous silicate and carbonaceous materials that form the bulk of interstellar dust must therefore be the result of grain growth in the presence of ultraviolet radiation. Dust in high-z systems such as J1148+5251 is also produced primarily in the interstellar medium, with supernova-produced dust contributing only a small fraction of the total dust mass.
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