The dust-to-gas and dust-to-metal ratio in galaxies from z = 0 to 6

Author:

Li Qi1ORCID,Narayanan Desika123ORCID,Davé Romeel456ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Astronomy, University of Florida, 211 Bryant Space Science Center, Gainesville, FL 32611, USA

2. University of Florida Informatics Institute, 432 Newell Drive, CISE Bldg E251 Gainesville, FL 32611, USA

3. Cosmic Dawn Centre at the Niels Bohr Institue, University of Copenhagen and DTU-Space, Technical University of Denmark, Copenhagen, DK-2100, Denmark

4. Institute for Astronomy, Royal Observatory, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh EH9 3HJ, UK

5. University of the Western Cape, Bellville, Cape Town, 7535, South Africa

6. South African Astronomical Observatories, Observatory, Capte Town, 7925, South Africa

Abstract

ABSTRACT We present predictions for the evolution of the galaxy dust-to-gas ratio (DGR) and dust-to-metal ratio (DTM) from z = 0 → 6, using a model for the production, growth, and destruction of dust grains implemented into the simba cosmological hydrodynamic galaxy formation simulation. In our model, dust forms in stellar ejecta, grows by the accretion of metals, and is destroyed by thermal sputtering and supernovae. Our simulation reproduces the observed dust mass function at z = 0, but modestly underpredicts the mass function by ∼×3 at z ∼ 1–2. The z = 0 DGR versus metallicity relationship shows a tight positive correlation for star-forming galaxies, while it is uncorrelated for quenched systems. There is little evolution in the DGR–metallicity relationship between z = 0 and 6. We use machine learning techniques to search for the galaxy physical properties that best correlate with the DGR and DTM. We find that the DGR is primarily correlated with the gas-phase metallicity, though correlations with the depletion time-scale, stellar mass, and gas fraction are non-negligible. We provide a crude fitting relationship for DGR and DTM versus the gas-phase metallicity, along with a public code package that estimates the DGR and DTM given a set of galaxy physical properties.

Funder

National Science Foundation

Space Telescope Science Institute

Wolfson Research Merit Award

STFC

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Space and Planetary Science,Astronomy and Astrophysics

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