The Galactic Halo UV Field, Magellanic Stream and High Velocity Clouds
read the original abstract
Significant numbers of high-velocity HI clouds (HVCs) have now been detected in H-alpha, with a subset seen in low ionization lines (e.g. [NII]). It was originally hoped that the observed H-alpha strength would provide a distance constraint to individual clouds. This idea requires that a useful fraction (f_esc > 1%) of ionizing photons escape the Galaxy, and that the halo ionizing field is relatively smooth, as we discuss. Most HVCs which are known to be close to the Sun are H-alpha; the brightest clouds also show enhanced [NII] emission, in contrast to the Magellanic Stream where the low ionization emission lines are always weak compared to H-alpha. But an acute complication for H-alpha distances is the apparent H-alpha brightness of the Magellanic Stream along several sight lines. To account for this, we present three possible configurations for the Magellanic Stream and propose a follow-up experiment. If we normalize the distances to local HVCs, some HVCs appear to be scattered throughout the Galactic halo on scales of tens of kiloparsecs.
This paper has not been read by Pith yet.
discussion (0)
Sign in with ORCID, Apple, or X to comment. Anyone can read and Pith papers without signing in.