The Origin of Cosmic Dust

Astronomy and Astrophysics – Astrophysics

Scientific paper

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13 pages, 4 figures appearing in the 17th July issue of Nature

Scientific paper

10.1038/nature01792

Large amounts of dust have recently been discovered in high-z galaxies and QSOs. The stellar winds produced by AGB stars are thought to be the main source of dust in galaxies, but they cannot produce that dust on a short enough timescale (<1 Gyr) to explain the results in the high-z galaxies. Supernova explosions of massive stars (TypeII) are also a potential source, with models predicting 0.2-4 Msun of dust from each. As massive stars evolve rapidly, on timescales of a few Myr, these supernovae could be responsible for the high-z dust. Observations of supernova remnants in the Milky Way have previously only revealed 10^-7 - 10^-3 Msun of dust each, which is insufficient to explain the high-z data. Here we report the detection of ~2-4 Msun of cold dust in Cas A. This implies that supernovae are at least as important as stellar winds in producing dust in our Galaxy and would have been the dominant source of dust at high-z.

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