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Published January 18, 2018 | Accepted Version
Journal Article Open

Probing the Baryon Cycle of Galaxies with SPICA Mid- and Far-Infrared Observations

Abstract

The SPICA mid- and far-infrared telescope will address fundamental issues in our understanding of star formation and ISM physics in galaxies. A particular hallmark of SPICA is the outstanding sensitivity enabled by the cold telescope, optimised detectors, and wide instantaneous bandwidth throughout the mid- and far-infrared. The spectroscopic, imaging, and polarimetric observations that SPICA will be able to collect will help in clarifying the complex physical mechanisms which underlie the baryon cycle of galaxies. In particular, (i) the access to a large suite of atomic and ionic fine-structure lines for large samples of galaxies will shed light on the origin of the observed spread in star-formation rates within and between galaxies, (ii) observations of HD rotational lines (out to ~10 Mpc) and fine structure lines such as [C ii] 158 μm (out to ~100 Mpc) will clarify the main reservoirs of interstellar matter in galaxies, including phases where CO does not emit, (iii) far-infrared spectroscopy of dust and ice features will address uncertainties in the mass and composition of dust in galaxies, and the contributions of supernovae to the interstellar dust budget will be quantified by photometry and monitoring of supernova remnants in nearby galaxies, (iv) observations of far-infrared cooling lines such as [O i] 63 μm from star-forming molecular clouds in our Galaxy will evaluate the importance of shocks to dissipate turbulent energy. The paper concludes with requirements for the telescope and instruments, and recommendations for the observing strategy.

Additional Information

© 2018 Astronomical Society of Australia. Published online: 18 January 2018. This paper is dedicated to the memory of Bruce Swinyard, a major force behind the initial SPICA project, who died on 22 May 2015 at the age of 52. We remember him as ISO-LWS calibration scientist, Herschel-SPIRE instrument scientist, initial European PI of SPICA, and initial design lead of the SAFARI instrument. We appreciate the helpful comments by an anonymous referee which have improved the paper. One of us (HG) acknowledges support from ERC Consolidator Grant Cosmic-Dust.

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