The Astrophysical Journal Letters (Jan 2023)

PHANGS–JWST First Results: The Dust Filament Network of NGC 628 and Its Relation to Star Formation Activity

  • David A. Thilker,
  • Janice C. Lee,
  • Sinan Deger,
  • Ashley T. Barnes,
  • Frank Bigiel,
  • Médéric Boquien,
  • Yixian Cao,
  • Mélanie Chevance,
  • Daniel A. Dale,
  • Oleg V. Egorov,
  • Simon C. O. Glover,
  • Kathryn Grasha,
  • Jonathan D. Henshaw,
  • Ralf S. Klessen,
  • Eric Koch,
  • J. M. Diederik Kruijssen,
  • Adam K. Leroy,
  • Ryan A. Lessing,
  • Sharon E. Meidt,
  • Francesca Pinna,
  • Miguel Querejeta,
  • Erik Rosolowsky,
  • Karin M. Sandstrom,
  • Eva Schinnerer,
  • Rowan J. Smith,
  • Elizabeth J. Watkins,
  • Thomas G. Williams,
  • Gagandeep S. Anand,
  • Francesco Belfiore,
  • Guillermo A. Blanc,
  • Rupali Chandar,
  • Enrico Congiu,
  • Eric Emsellem,
  • Brent Groves,
  • Kathryn Kreckel,
  • Kirsten L. Larson,
  • Daizhong Liu,
  • Ismael Pessa,
  • Bradley C. Whitmore

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3847/2041-8213/acaeac
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 944, no. 2
p. L13

Abstract

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PHANGS–JWST mid-infrared (MIR) imaging of nearby spiral galaxies has revealed ubiquitous filaments of dust emission in intricate detail. We present a pilot study to systematically map the dust filament network (DFN) at multiple scales between 25 and 400 pc in NGC 628. MIRI images at 7.7, 10, 11.3, and 21 μ m of NGC 628 are used to generate maps of the filaments in emission, while PHANGS–HST B -band imaging yields maps of dust attenuation features. We quantify the correspondence between filaments traced by MIR thermal continuum/polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH) emission and filaments detected via extinction/scattering of visible light; the fraction of MIR flux contained in the DFN; and the fraction of H ii regions, young star clusters, and associations within the DFN. We examine the dependence of these quantities on the physical scale at which the DFN is extracted. With our highest-resolution DFN maps (25 pc filament width), we find that filaments in emission and attenuation are cospatial in 40% of sight lines, often exhibiting detailed morphological agreement; that ∼30% of the MIR flux is associated with the DFN; and that 75%–80% of the star formation in H ii regions and 60% of the mass in star clusters younger than 5 Myr are contained within the DFN. However, the DFN at this scale is anticorrelated with looser associations of stars younger than 5 Myr identified using PHANGS–HST near-UV imaging. We discuss the impact of these findings on studies of star formation and the interstellar medium, and the broad range of new investigations enabled by multiscale maps of the DFN.

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