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Iron: A Key Element for Understanding the Origin and Evolution of Interstellar Dust

2 Pith papers cite this work. Polarity classification is still indexing.

2 Pith papers citing it
abstract

The origin and depletion of iron differ from all other abundant refractory elements that make up the composition of the interstellar dust. Iron is primarily synthesized in Type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia) and in core collapse supernovae (CCSN), and is present in the outflows from AGB stars. Only the latter two are observed to be sources of interstellar dust, since searches for dust in SN~Ia have provided strong evidence for the absence of any significant mass of dust in their ejecta. Consequently, more than 65% of the iron is injected into the ISM in gaseous form. Yet, ultraviolet and X-ray observations along many lines of sight in the ISM show that iron is severely depleted in the gas phase compared to expected solar abundances. The missing iron, comprising about 90% of the total, is believed to be locked up in interstellar dust. This suggests that most of the missing iron must have precipitated from the ISM gas by cold accretion onto preexisting silicate, carbon, or composite grains. Iron is thus the only element that requires most of its growth to occur outside the traditional stellar condensation sources. This is a robust statement that does not depend on our evolving understanding of the dust destruction efficiency in the ISM. Reconciling the physical, optical, and chemical properties of such composite grains with their many observational manifestations is a major challenge for understanding the nature and origin of interstellar dust.

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citation-polarity summary

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astro-ph.GA 2

years

2026 1 2025 1

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UNVERDICTED 2

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Showing 2 of 2 citing papers.

  • Probing Anomalous Microwave Emission with the Square Kilometre Array astro-ph.GA · 2026-06-25 · unverdicted · none · ref 37 · internal anchor

    This review summarizes evidence for anomalous microwave emission and projects how SKA observations will identify its carriers and mechanisms in Galactic and extragalactic environments.

  • Interstellar dust production, destruction and effects of dust depletion in galaxies astro-ph.GA · 2025-06-16 · unverdicted · none · ref 258 · internal anchor

    The paper reviews dust production, destruction and growth processes in galaxies, compiles literature data on comoving dust mass density, presents evidence for and against interstellar dust growth, and identifies the high-redshift dust budget as needing further study.