CaII and NaI absorption signatures from extraplanar gas in the halo of the Milky Way
N. Ben Bekhti (AIfA, Bonn), P. Richter (University Potsdam), T., Westmeier (ATNF, Sydney), M. T. Murphy (University of Technology, Swinburne)

TL;DR
This study investigates the distribution and physical properties of extraplanar gas in the Milky Way halo using CaII/NaI absorption and HI emission data, revealing numerous neutral gas structures and their relation to galaxy evolution.
Contribution
It combines optical and radio observations to characterize extraplanar gas, linking local Milky Way halo features with extragalactic metal-line systems for the first time.
Findings
35% of sight lines show CaII/NaI absorbers at high velocities.
CaII column density follows a power-law distribution.
Many properties of Milky Way halo gas resemble those of extragalactic MgII absorbers.
Abstract
We analyse absorption characteristics and physical conditions of extraplanar intermediate- and high-velocity gas to study the distribution of the neutral and weakly ionised Milky Way halo gas and its relevance for the evolution of the Milky Way and other spiral galaxies. We combine optical absorption line measurements of CaII/NaI and 21 cm emission line observations of HI along 103 extragalactic lines of sight towards quasars (QSOs) and active galactic nuclei (AGN). The archival optical spectra were obtained with UVES at the ESO VLT, while the 21 cm HI observations were carried out using the 100-m radio telescope at Effelsberg. The analysis of the UVES spectra shows that single and multi-component CaII/NaI absorbers at intermediate and high velocities are present in about 35% of the sight lines, indicating the presence of neutral extraplanar gas structures. In some cases the…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
