Measuring Molecular, Neutral Atomic, and Warm Ionized Galactic Gas through X‐Ray Absorption

  • Arabadjis J
  • Bregman J
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Abstract

We study the column densities of neutral atomic, molecular, and warm ionized Galactic gas through their continuous absorption of extragalactic X-ray spectra at |b|>25^deg. For N_H,21cm<5x10^20 cm^-2, there is an extremely tight relationship between N_H,21cm and the X-ray absorption column, N_H,x, with a mean ratio along 26 lines of sight of N_H,x/N_H,21cm=0.972+/-0.022. This is significantly less than the anticipated ratio of 1.23, which would occur if He were half He I and half He II in the warm ionized component. We suggest that the ionized component out of the plane is highly ionized, with He being mainly He II and He III. In the limiting case that H is entirely H I, we place an upper limit on the He abundance in the ISM of He/H 5x10^20 cm^-2, which occurs at our lower latitudes, the X-ray absorption column N_H,x is nearly double N_H,21cm. This excess column cannot be due to the warm ionized component even if He were entirely He I, so it must be due to a molecular component. This result implies that for lines of sight out of the plane with |b|~30^deg, molecular gas is common, with a column density comparable to N_H,21cm. This work bears upon the far-IR background, since a warm ionized component, anticorrelated with N_H,21cm, might produce such a background. Not only is such an anticorrelation absent, but if the dust is destroyed in the warm ionized gas the far-IR background may be slightly larger than that deduced by Puget and coworkers.

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Arabadjis, J. S., & Bregman, J. N. (1999). Measuring Molecular, Neutral Atomic, and Warm Ionized Galactic Gas through X‐Ray Absorption. The Astrophysical Journal, 510(2), 806–821. https://doi.org/10.1086/306616

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