Distance to the northern high-latitude HI shells
Lucky Puspitarini, Rosine Lallement

TL;DR
This study maps the 3D distribution of high-latitude HI gas near the Sun, determining the distances to the northern Loop I shell and analyzing its structure and relation to interstellar features.
Contribution
It provides precise distance estimates to the northern part of Loop I HI shell using stellar spectra, revealing complex geometries inconsistent with simple models.
Findings
Closest boundary of Loop I at 98 ± 6 pc for b ≥ 70°
Lower-latitude boundary estimated between 95-157 pc
High-velocity HI structure is beyond 200 pc or depleted in NaI and CaII
Abstract
A detailed 3D distribution of interstellar matter in the solar neighborhood is increasingly necessary. As part of a 3D mapping program, we aim at assigning a precise distance to the high-latitude HI gas in particular the northern part (b \geq 55^{circ}) of the shell associated with the conspicuous radio continuum Loop I. This shell is thought to be the expanding boundary of an interstellar bubble inflated and recently reheated by the strong stellar winds of the nearby Scorpius-Centaurus OB. We recorded high-resolution spectra of 30 A-type target stars located at various distances in the direction of the northern part of Loop I. Interstellar NaI 5889-5895 and CaII K-H 3934-3968 {\AA} are modeled and compared with the HI emission spectra from the LAB Survey. About two-thirds of our stellar spectra possess narrow interstellar lines. Narrow lines are located at the velocity of the main,…
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