A New Galactic Extinction Map in High Ecliptic Latitudes
Tsunehito Kohyama, Hiroshi Shibai, Misato Fukagawa, Takahiro Sumi,, Yasunori Hibi

TL;DR
This paper presents a high-resolution galactic extinction map for high ecliptic latitudes, derived from far-infrared data, offering improved spatial detail over previous maps and better estimates of extragalactic reddening.
Contribution
The study introduces a novel method to derive dust temperature and extinction maps with 5' resolution, surpassing prior maps in spatial detail and accuracy for high ecliptic latitudes.
Findings
The new map has significantly higher spatial resolution than previous maps.
It shows notable differences in 28% of the high ecliptic latitude region.
The method provides more accurate extragalactic reddening estimates in 81% of the area.
Abstract
In this study, we derived a galactic extinction map in high ecliptic latitudes for |\beta| > 30 degrees. The dust temperature distribution was derived from the intensities at 100 and 140 \mu m with a spatial resolution of 5'. The intensity at 140 \mu m was derived from the intensities at 60 and 100 \mu m of the IRAS data assuming two tight correlations between the intensities at 60, 100, and 140 \mu m of the COBE/DIRBE data. We found that these correlations can be separated into two correlations by the antenna temperature of the radio continuum at 41 GHz. Because the present study can trace the 5'-scale spatial variation in the dust temperature distribution, it has an advantage over the extinction map derived by Schlegel, Finkbeiner, and Davis, who used the DIRBE maps to derive dust temperature distribution with a spatial resolution of 1 degrees. We estimated the accuracy of our…
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