Properties and Origin of the High-Velocity Gas Toward the Large Magellanic Cloud
N. Lehner, L. Staveley-Smith, J.C. Howk

TL;DR
This study investigates the properties and origin of high-velocity gas near the Large Magellanic Cloud, revealing a multiphase, metal-enriched outflow likely driven by stellar feedback in the galaxy.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed analysis linking a large high-velocity cloud complex to stellar feedback in a dwarf spiral galaxy.
Findings
High-velocity clouds have metallicity similar to the LMC.
HVC complex is multiphase and ionized.
Evidence suggests the HVCs originate from LMC outflows.
Abstract
In the spectra of 139 early-type Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC) stars observed with FUSE and with deep radio Parkes HI 21-cm observations along those stars, we search for and analyze the absorption and emission from high-velocity gas at +90<v<+175 km/s. The HI column density of the high-velocity clouds (HVCs) along these sightlines ranges from <10^18.4 to 10^19.2 cm^-2. The incidence of the HVC metal absorption is 70%, significantly higher than the HI emission occurrence of 32%. We find that the mean metallicity of the HVC is [OI/HI] = -0.51 (+0.12,-0.16). There is no strong evidence for a large variation in the HVC metallicity, implying that thes e HVCs have a similar origin and are part of the same complex. The mean and scatter of the HVC metallicities are more consistent with the present-day LMC oxygen abundance than that of the Small Magellanic Cloud or the Milky Way. We find that on…
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