Herschel : the first science highlights Special feature L E FIR colours and SEDs of nearby galaxies observed with Herschel ⋆

We present infrared colours (in the 25-500 mu m spectral range) and UV to radio continuum spectral energy distributions of a sample of 51 nearby galaxies observed with SPIRE on Herschel. The observed sample includes all morphological classes, from quiescent ellipticals to active starbursts. Active galaxies have warmer colour temperatures than normal spirals. In ellipticals hosting a radio galaxy, the far-infrared (FIR) emission is dominated by the synchrotron nuclear emission. The colour temperature of the cold dust is higher in quiescent E-S0a than in star-forming systems probably because of the different nature of their dust heating sources (evolved stellar populations, X-ray, fast electrons) and dust grain properties. In contrast to the colour temperature of the warm dust, the f350/f500 index sensitive to the cold dust decreases with star formation and increases with metallicity, suggesting an overabundance of cold dust or an emissivity parameter beta <2 in low metallicity, active systems.

[1]  S. Ott,et al.  Herschel Space Observatory - An ESA facility for far-infrared and submillimetre astronomy , 2010, 1005.5331.

[2]  S. J. Liu,et al.  Herschel : the first science highlights Special feature L etter to the E ditor The Herschel-SPIRE instrument and its in-flight performance , 2010 .

[3]  H. Roussel,et al.  In-flight calibration of the Herschel-SPIRE instrument , 2010, 1005.5073.

[4]  G. Gavazzi,et al.  The Herschel Virgo Cluster Survey. I. Luminosity function [Letter] , 2010, 1005.3054.

[5]  G. Gavazzi,et al.  The Herschel Virgo Cluster Survey , 2017 .

[6]  D. L. Clements,et al.  Herschel photometric observations of the low metallicity dwarf galaxy NGC 1705 , 2010, 1005.2091.

[7]  D. L. Clements,et al.  Herschel : the first science highlights Special feature L etter to the E ditor The Herschel Space Observatory view of dust in M 81 , 2010 .

[8]  M. Sauvage,et al.  Herschel photometric observations of the nearby low metallicity irregular galaxy NGC 6822 , 2010, 1005.1730.

[9]  D. L. Clements,et al.  SPIRE imaging of M 82: Cool dust in the wind and tidal streams , 2010, 1005.1526.

[10]  M. Sauvage,et al.  The Herschel Reference Survey , 2010, 1001.5136.

[11]  M. Sauvage,et al.  Radial distribution of gas and dust in spiral galaxies , 2010, 1005.5476.

[12]  G. Gavazzi,et al.  HIGH-MASS STAR FORMATION IN NORMAL LATE-TYPE GALAXIES: OBSERVATIONAL CONSTRAINTS TO THE INITIAL MASS FUNCTION , 2009, 0910.3521.

[13]  L. Kewley,et al.  Metallicity Calibrations and the Mass-Metallicity Relation for Star-forming Galaxies , 2008, 0801.1849.

[14]  D. Calzetti,et al.  Dust Masses, PAH Abundances, and Starlight Intensities in the SINGS Galaxy Sample , 2007, astro-ph/0703213.

[15]  C. Leitherer,et al.  An Ultraviolet-to-Radio Broadband Spectral Atlas of Nearby Galaxies , 2006, astro-ph/0610688.

[16]  B. Draine,et al.  Infrared Emission from Interstellar Dust. IV. The Silicate-Graphite-PAH Model in the Post-Spitzer Era , 2006, astro-ph/0608003.

[17]  D. Calzetti,et al.  The Spectral Energy Distribution of Dust Emission in the Edge-on Spiral Galaxy NGC 4631 as Seen with Spitzer and the James Clerk Maxwell Telescope , 2006, astro-ph/0607669.

[18]  G. Gavazzi,et al.  Environmental Effects on Late‐Type Galaxies in Nearby Clusters , 2006, astro-ph/0601108.

[19]  L. Kewley,et al.  Infrared Spectral Energy Distributions of Nearby Galaxies , 2005, astro-ph/0507645.

[20]  G. Gavazzi,et al.  UV Properties of Early-Type Galaxies in the Virgo Cluster , 2005, astro-ph/0507169.

[21]  A. Jones,et al.  ISM properties in low-metallicity environments. III. The dust spectral energy distributions of II Zw 40, He 2-10 and NGC 1140 , 2005, astro-ph/0501632.

[22]  G. Gavazzi,et al.  Spectrophotometry of galaxies in the Virgo cluster , II. The data , 2004, astro-ph/0401636.

[23]  M. Pettini,et al.  [O III] / [N II] as an abundance indicator at high redshift , 2004, astro-ph/0401128.

[24]  S. C. Madden,et al.  ISM properties in low-metallicity environments II. The dust spectral energy distribution of NGC 1569 , 2003, astro-ph/0306192.

[25]  UV to radio centimetric spectral energy distributions of optically-selected late-type galaxies in the Virgo cluster , 2003, astro-ph/0301134.

[26]  G. Gavazzi,et al.  Introducing GOLDMine: A new galaxy database on the WEB , 2002, astro-ph/0212257.

[27]  D. Elbaz,et al.  Interpreting the Cosmic Infrared Background: Constraints on the Evolution of the Dust-enshrouded Star Formation Rate , 2001, astro-ph/0103067.

[28]  G. Gavazzi,et al.  1.65 Micron (H Band) Surface Photometry of Galaxies. VI. The History of Star Formation in Normal Late-Type Galaxies , 2000, astro-ph/0011016.

[29]  G. Helou,et al.  The Infrared Spectral Energy Distribution of Normal Star-forming Galaxies: Calibration at Far-Infrared and Submillimeter Wavelengths , 2000, astro-ph/0011014.

[30]  Robert W. O'Connell,et al.  Far-Ultraviolet Radiation from Elliptical Galaxies , 1999, astro-ph/9906068.

[31]  A. Tielens,et al.  The neutral atomic phases of the interstellar medium , 1995 .

[32]  Michael Rowan-Robinson,et al.  Models for infrared emission from IRAS galaxies , 1989 .