A Large Reservoir of Ionized Gas in the Galactic Halo: Ionized Silicon in High-Velocity and Intermediate-Velocity Clouds
J. Michael Shull (U. Colorado), Jennifer R. Jones (Michigan State),, Charles W. Danforth (U. Colorado), Joseph A. Collins (U. Colorado)

TL;DR
This study reveals a widespread reservoir of ionized, low-metallicity gas in the Galactic halo, detected via silicon absorption lines, which could significantly contribute to the galaxy's mass inflow and star formation replenishment.
Contribution
It provides the first large-scale quantification of ionized silicon in high-velocity and intermediate-velocity clouds, revealing their extent, metallicity, and potential role in galactic inflow.
Findings
Detected widespread SiIII absorption in HVCs and IVCs
Estimated the total ionized gas mass in the halo (~10^8 M_sun)
Inferred a mass inflow rate of approximately 1 solar mass per year
Abstract
The low Galactic halo is enveloped by a sheath of ionized, low-metallicity gas, which can provide a substantial (1 M_sun/yr) cooling inflow to replenish star formation in the disk. Using absorption spectra from the HST and FUSE toward 37 active galactic nuclei at high latitude, we detect widespread interstellar SiIII 1206.5 absorption: 61 high-velocity clouds (HVCs) along 30 sight lines and 22 intermediate-velocity clouds (IVCs) along 20 sight lines. We find a segregation of redshifted and blueshifted absorbers across the Galactic rotation axis at l=180, consistent with a lag in the rotation velocity above the Galactic plane. The HVC sky coverage is large (81+-5% for 30/37 directions) with SiIII optical depth typically 4-5 times that of OVI 1032. The mean HVC column density per sight line, <log N_SiIII>=13.42+-0.21, corresponds to total column density N_HII~6x10^18)/(Z_Si/0.2Z_sun) of…
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