Molecular gas in high-velocity clouds: revisited scenario
M. Dessauges-Zavadsky (1), F. Combes (2), D. Pfenniger (1) ((1) Geneva, Observatory, Geneva University, Switzerland, (2) Paris Observatory, LERMA,, France)

TL;DR
This study conducted a sensitive search for CO emission in high-velocity clouds, finding no detection and discussing implications for molecular gas presence, dust, and physical conditions in these clouds.
Contribution
The paper provides the most sensitive CO search in HVCs to date and explores how molecular gas might still be present in small, dense clumps despite non-detection.
Findings
No CO emission detected in Complex C HVCs at improved sensitivity.
Molecular gas may exist in small, dense clumps below detection limits.
Physical conditions and low metallicity hinder CO detection despite dust evidence.
Abstract
We report a new search for 12CO(1-0) emission in high-velocity clouds (HVCs) performed with the IRAM 30 m telescope. This search was motivated by the recent detection of cold dust emission in the HVCs of Complex C. Despite a spatial resolution which is three times better and sensitivity twice as good compared to previous studies, no CO emission is detected in the HVCs of Complex C down to a best 5 sigma limit of 0.16 K km/s at a 22'' resolution. The CO emission non-detection does not provide any evidence in favor of large amounts of molecular gas in these HVCs and hence in favor of the infrared findings. We discuss different configurations which, however, allow us to reconcile the negative CO result with the presence of molecular gas and cold dust emission. H2 column densities higher than our detection limit, N(H2) = 3x10^{19} cm^{-2}, are expected to be confined in very small and dense…
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