AMI observations of Lynds Dark Nebulae: further evidence for anomalous cm-wave emission
Anna M. M. Scaife, Natasha Hurley-Walker, David A. Green, Matthew L., Davies, Thomas M. O. Franzen, Keith J. B. Grainge, Michael P. Hobson, Anthony, N. Lasenby, Guy G. Pooley, Carmen Rodriguez-Gonzalvez, Richard D. E., Saunders, Paul F. Scott, Timothy W. Shimwell

TL;DR
This study uses AMI observations of Lynds Dark Nebulae to find evidence of anomalous microwave emission, likely from spinning dust, by comparing high-frequency data with lower-frequency radio observations.
Contribution
It provides new detections of spinning dust emission in Lynds Dark Nebulae, including one confirmed and three probable cases, expanding understanding of anomalous microwave emission sources.
Findings
Five sources show possible spinning dust emission.
One new definite detection: L675.
Three new probable detections: L944, L1103, L1246.
Abstract
Observations at 14.2 to 17.9 GHz made with the AMI Small Array towards fourteen Lynds Dark Nebulae with a resolution of 2' are reported. These sources are selected from the SCUBA observations of Visser et al. (2001) as small angular diameter clouds well matched to the synthesized beam of the AMI Small Array. Comparison of the AMI observations with radio observations at lower frequencies with matched uv-plane coverage is made, in order to search for any anomalous excess emission which can be attributed to spinning dust. Possible emission from spinning dust is identified as a source within a 2' radius of the Scuba position of the Lynds dark nebula, exhibiting an excess with respect to lower frequency radio emission. We find five sources which show a possible spinning dust component in their spectra. These sources have rising spectral indices in the frequency range 14.2--17.9 GHz. Of these…
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