An all sky map of the apparent temperature and optical depth of thermal dust emission is constructed using the Planck-HFI (350 μm to 2 mm) and IRAS (100 μm) data. The optical depth maps are correlated with tracers of the atomic (H i) and molecular gas traced by CO. The correlation with the column density of observed gas is linear in the lowest column density regions at high Galactic latitudes. At high NH, the correlation is consistent with that of the lowest NH, for a given choice of the CO-to-H2 conversion factor. In the intermediate NH range, a departure from linearity is observed, with the dust optical depth in excess of the correlation. This excess emission is attributed to thermal emission by dust associated with a dark gas phase, undetected in the available H i and CO surveys. The 2D spatial distribution of the dark gas in the solar neighbourhood (|bII | > 10◦ ) is shown to extend around known molecular regions traced by CO. The average dust emissivity in the H i phase in the solar neighbourhood is found to be τD/Ntot = 5.2 × 10−26 cm2 at 857 GHz. It follows roughly a power law distribution with a spectral index β = 1.8 all the way down to 3 mm,although the SED flattens slightly in the millimetre. Taking into account the spectral shape of the dust optical depth, the emissivity is consistent with previous values derived from FIRAS measurements at high latitudes within 10%. The threshold for the existence of the dark gas is found at Ntot = (8.0±0.58)×1020 H cm−2 (AV = 0.4 mag). Assuming the same high frequency emissivity for the dust in the atomic and the molecular phases H leadstoanaverageXCO =(2.54±0.13)×1020 H2 cm−2/(Kkms−1).Themassofdarkgasisfoundtobe28%oftheatomicgasand118%oftheCO emitting gas in the solar neighbourhood. The Galactic latitude distribution shows that its mass fraction is relatively constant down to a few degrees from the Galactic plane. A possible explanation for the dark gas lies in a dark molecular phase, where H2 survives photodissociation but CO does not. The observed transition for the onset of this phase in the solar neighbourhood (AV = 0.4 mag) appears consistent with recent theoretical predictions. It is also possible that up to half of the dark gas could be in atomic form, due to optical depth effects in the H i measurements.

Planck Early Results: All sky temperature and dust optical depth from Planck and IRAS: Constraints on the "dark gas" in our galaxy

GREGORIO, ANNA;
2011-01-01

Abstract

An all sky map of the apparent temperature and optical depth of thermal dust emission is constructed using the Planck-HFI (350 μm to 2 mm) and IRAS (100 μm) data. The optical depth maps are correlated with tracers of the atomic (H i) and molecular gas traced by CO. The correlation with the column density of observed gas is linear in the lowest column density regions at high Galactic latitudes. At high NH, the correlation is consistent with that of the lowest NH, for a given choice of the CO-to-H2 conversion factor. In the intermediate NH range, a departure from linearity is observed, with the dust optical depth in excess of the correlation. This excess emission is attributed to thermal emission by dust associated with a dark gas phase, undetected in the available H i and CO surveys. The 2D spatial distribution of the dark gas in the solar neighbourhood (|bII | > 10◦ ) is shown to extend around known molecular regions traced by CO. The average dust emissivity in the H i phase in the solar neighbourhood is found to be τD/Ntot = 5.2 × 10−26 cm2 at 857 GHz. It follows roughly a power law distribution with a spectral index β = 1.8 all the way down to 3 mm,although the SED flattens slightly in the millimetre. Taking into account the spectral shape of the dust optical depth, the emissivity is consistent with previous values derived from FIRAS measurements at high latitudes within 10%. The threshold for the existence of the dark gas is found at Ntot = (8.0±0.58)×1020 H cm−2 (AV = 0.4 mag). Assuming the same high frequency emissivity for the dust in the atomic and the molecular phases H leadstoanaverageXCO =(2.54±0.13)×1020 H2 cm−2/(Kkms−1).Themassofdarkgasisfoundtobe28%oftheatomicgasand118%oftheCO emitting gas in the solar neighbourhood. The Galactic latitude distribution shows that its mass fraction is relatively constant down to a few degrees from the Galactic plane. A possible explanation for the dark gas lies in a dark molecular phase, where H2 survives photodissociation but CO does not. The observed transition for the onset of this phase in the solar neighbourhood (AV = 0.4 mag) appears consistent with recent theoretical predictions. It is also possible that up to half of the dark gas could be in atomic form, due to optical depth effects in the H i measurements.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11368/2310484
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