The Structure of Molecular Clouds: I - All Sky Near Infrared Extinction Maps
J. Rowles (1), D. Froebrich (1) ((1) Centre for Astrophysics and, Planetary Science - University of Kent)

TL;DR
This paper presents all-sky near-infrared extinction maps of molecular clouds using 2MASS data, offering improved resolution and accuracy in measuring dust extinction and revealing small-scale structures.
Contribution
The authors developed a novel large-scale extinction mapping method with constant noise or resolution, improving detection of small-scale features in molecular clouds.
Findings
Maps show systematically higher extinction values than previous maps.
Enhanced resolution detects more small-scale high extinction cores.
Constant variance of 0.28 mag Av across the entire map.
Abstract
We are studying the column density distribution of all nearby giant molecular clouds. As part of this project we generated several all sky extinction maps. They are calculated using the median near infrared colour excess technique applied to data from the Two Micron All-Sky Survey (2MASS). Our large scale approach allows us to fit spline functions to extinction free regions in order to accurately determine the colour excess values. Two types of maps are presented: i) Maps with a constant noise and variable spatial resolution; ii) Maps with a constant spatial resolution and variable noise. Our standard Av map uses the nearest 49 stars to the centre of each pixel for the determination of the extinction. The one sigma variance is constant at 0.28mag Av in the entire map. The distance to the 49th nearest star varies from below 1arcmin near the Galactic Plane to about 10arcmin at the poles,…
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