Lifting the Dusty Veil With Near- and Mid-Infrared Photometry: III. Two-Dimensional Extinction Maps of the Galactic Midplane Using the Rayleigh-Jeans Color Excess Method
David L. Nidever, Gail Zasowski, and Steven R. Majewski

TL;DR
This paper presents high-resolution, star-by-star extinction maps of the Galactic midplane using the RJCE method, providing detailed, accurate insights into dust distribution and three-dimensional structure in heavily obscured regions.
Contribution
The study introduces the most detailed and accurate star-by-star extinction maps of the Galactic midplane using the RJCE method, covering large areas with high angular resolution.
Findings
Maps reach up to 20 kpc, probing most of the Milky Way's extinction.
Maps provide near total Galactic extinction estimates with high spatial resolution.
Red giant star tracers enable three-dimensional dust structure insights.
Abstract
We provide new, high-resolution A(Ks) extinction maps of the heavily reddened Galactic midplane based on the Rayleigh-Jeans Color Excess ("RJCE") method. RJCE determines star-by-star reddening based on a combination of near- and mid-infrared photometry. The new RJCE-generated maps have 2 x 2 arcmin pixels and span some of the most severely extinguished regions of the Galaxy -- those covered with Spitzer+IRAC imaging by the GLIMPSE-I, -II, -3D, and Vela-Carina surveys, from 256<l<65 deg and, in general, for |b| <= 1-1.5 deg (extending up to |b|<=4 deg in the bulge). Using RJCE extinction measurements, we generate dereddened color-magnitude diagrams and, in turn, create maps based on main sequence, red clump, and red giant star tracers, each probing different distances and thereby providing coarse three-dimensional information on the relative placement of dust cloud structures. The maps…
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