IRAS data reveal bright emission from interplanetary dust which dominates the celestial background at 12, 25, and 60 microns except near the galactic plane. At 100 microns, interplanetary dust emission is prominent only near the ecliptic plane; diffuse galactic emission is found over the rest of the sky. At the galactic poles, the observed brightness implies that A(v) is likely to be of order 0.1 mag. The angular variation of the zodiacal emission in the ecliptic plane and in the plane at elongation 90 deg, and an annual modulation of the ecliptic pole brightness, are generally consistent with previously determined interplanetary dust distributions.
CITATION STYLE
Hauser, M. G., Gillett, F. C., Low, F. J., Gautier, T. N., Beichman, C. A., Aumann, H. H., … Emerson, J. P. (1984). IRAS observations of the diffuse infrared background. The Astrophysical Journal, 278, L15. https://doi.org/10.1086/184212
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.