High-resolution 21-cm observations of low-column density gas clumps in the Milky Way halo
N. Ben Bekhti (1), P. Richter (2), B. Winkel (1), F. Kenn (1), T., Westmeier (3) ((1) Argelander-Institut fuer Astronomie, Bonn, (2) Institut, fuer Physik und Astronomie, Potsdam, (3) Australia Telescope National, Facility, Epping NSW)

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution 21-cm observations to identify and analyze small, cold, low-column density neutral gas clumps in the Milky Way halo, revealing a population of structures often missed in all-sky surveys.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed characterization of low-column density HI clumps in the Milky Way halo using high-resolution interferometric data.
Findings
Detected compact, cold HI clumps with narrow line widths.
Found low HI column densities in the range of 5E18 to 3E19 1/cm^2.
Associated optical absorbers with these low-column density HI structures.
Abstract
We study the properties of low-column density gas clumps in the halo of the Milky Way based on high-resolution 21-cm observations. Using interferometric data from the WSRT and the VLA we study HI emission at low-, intermediate- and high radial velocities along four lines of sight towards quasars. Along these sightlines we previously detected weak CaII and NaI absorbers in their optical spectra. The analysis of the high-resolution HI data reveals the presence of several compact and cold clumps of neutral gas at velocities similar to the optical absorption. The clumps have narrow HI line widths in the range of 1.8 to 13 km/s, yielding upper limits for the kinetic temperature of the gas of 70 to 3700 K. The neutral gas has low HI column densities in the range of 5E18 to 3E19 1/cm^2. All clumps have angular sizes of only a few arcminutes. Our high-resolution 21-cm observations…
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