Variation in dust properties in a dense filament of the Taurus molecular complex (L1506)
Abstract
Aims. We observed the L1506 filament, which is located in the Taurus
molecular complex, with the Herschel PACS and SPIRE instruments. Our aim
is to prove the variation in grain properties along the entire length of the filament. In
particular, we want to determine above which gas density this variation arises and what
changes in the grain optical properties/size distribution are required.Methods. We use the 3D radiative transfer code CRT, coupled to the dust
emission and extinction code DustEM, to model the emission and extinction of the dense
filament. We test a range of optical properties and size distributions for the grains:
dust of the diffuse interstellar medium (interstellar PAHs and amorphous carbons and
silicates) and both compact and fluffy aggregates.Results. We find that the grain opacity has to increase across the
filament to fit simultaneously the near-IR extinction and Herschel
emission profiles of L1506. We interpret this change to be a consequence of the
coagulation of dust grains to form fluffy aggregates. Grains similar to those in the
diffuse medium have to be present in the outer layers of the cloud, whereas aggregates
must prevail above gas densities of a few 103 H/cm3. This
corresponds to line-of-sights with visual extinction in the V band of the
order of 2 to 3. The dust opacity at 250 μm is raised by a factor of 1.8
to 2.2, while the grain average size is increased by a factor of 5. These exact numbers
depend naturally on the dust model chosen to fit the data. Our findings agree with the
constraints given by the study of the gas molecular lines. Using a simple approach, we
show that the aggregates may have time to form inside the filament within the cloud
lifetime. Our model also characterises the density structure of the filament, showing that
the filament width is not constant along L1506 but instead varies by a factor of the order
of 4.Conclusions. We confirm the need for an increase in the far-IR dust
opacity to explain the emission and extinction in L1506C, which we interpret as being due
to dust growth. We also show that this opacity variation is valid along the entire length
of the L1506 dense filament.
Domains
Astrophysics [astro-ph]
Origin : Publication funded by an institution