High-velocity clouds as streams of ionized and neutral gas in the halo of the Milky Way
N. Lehner, J.C. Howk, C. Thom, A.J. Fox, J. Tumlinson, T.M. Tripp, and, J.D. Meiring

TL;DR
This study uses ultraviolet spectra of 133 AGN to map high-velocity clouds around the Milky Way, revealing their extensive ionized and neutral components, and their likely proximity within 15 kpc, impacting galaxy evolution understanding.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive UV-based survey of HVCs, quantifies their sky covering factor, and clarifies their ionization states and distances, refining models of galactic gas accretion.
Findings
HVC sky covering factor is 68%+/-4% for |v_LSR|>90 km/s.
Ionized HVCs contain at least as much mass as neutral ones.
HVCs with |v_LSR|>170 km/s are associated with known galactic structures.
Abstract
High-velocity clouds (HVC), fast-moving ionized and neutral gas clouds found at high galactic latitudes, may play an important role in the evolution of the Milky Way. The extent of this role depends sensitively on their distances and total sky covering factor. We search for HVC absorption in HST high resolution ultraviolet spectra of a carefully selected sample of 133 AGN using a range of atomic species in different ionization stages. This allows us to identify neutral, weakly ionized, or highly ionized HVCs over several decades in HI column densities. The sky covering factor of UV-selected HVCs with |v_LSR|>90 km/s is 68%+/-4% for the entire Galactic sky. We show that our survey is essentially complete, i.e., an undetected population of HVCs with extremely low N(H) (HI+HII) is unlikely to be important for the HVC mass budget. We confirm that the predominantly ionized HVCs contain at…
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