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arxiv 2012.15770 v1 pith:5TCQK6WX submitted 2020-12-31 astro-ph.GA astro-ph.HE

Bayesian inference of three-dimensional gas maps: I. Galactic CO

classification astro-ph.GA astro-ph.HE
keywords galacticdensitymapsthree-dimensionalallowsbayesiandistributionemission
verification ladder T0 review T1 audit T2 compute T3 formal T4 reserved
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Carbon monoxide (CO) is the best tracer of Galactic molecular hydrogen (H2). Its lowest rotational emission lines are in the radio regime and thanks to Galactic rotation emission at different distances is Doppler shifted. For a given gas flow model the observed spectra can thus be deprojected along the line of sight to infer the gas distribution. We use the CO line survey of Dame et al. (2001) to reconstruct the three-dimensional density of H2. We consider the deprojection as a Bayesian variational inference problem. The posterior distribution of the gas densities allows us to estimate both the mean and uncertainty of the reconstructed density. Unlike most of the previous attempts, we take into account the correlations of gas on a variety of scales which allows curing some of the well-known pathologies, like fingers-of-god effects. Both gas flow models that we adopt incorporate a Galactic bar which induces radial motions in the inner few kiloparsecs and thus offers spectral resolution towards the Galactic centre. We compare our gas maps with those of earlier studies and characterise their statistical properties, e.g. the radial profile of the average surface mass density. We have made our three-dimensional gas maps and their uncertainties available to the community at https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4405437 .

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