A Herschel [C II] Galactic plane survey II: CO-dark H2 in clouds
W. D. Langer, T. Velusamy, J. L. Pineda, K. Willacy, and P. F., Goldsmith (JPL-Caltech)

TL;DR
This study uses Herschel [C II] spectral data to identify and characterize CO-dark H2 gas in the Milky Way, revealing its significant presence especially in diffuse clouds and its variation with cloud density.
Contribution
It provides the first large-scale spectrally resolved survey of CO-dark H2 in the Galactic plane, quantifying its distribution and mass fraction across different cloud types.
Findings
CO-dark H2 clouds are concentrated between 3.5 and 7.5 kpc galactic radius.
Approximately 75% of diffuse molecular cloud mass is CO-dark H2.
CO-dark H2 constitutes a significant fraction of the warm molecular ISM, especially in diffuse clouds.
Abstract
ABRIDGED: Context: HI and CO large scale surveys of the Milky Way trace the diffuse atomic clouds and the dense shielded regions of molecular hydrogen clouds. However, until recently, we have not had spectrally resolved C+ surveys to characterize the photon dominated interstellar medium, including, the H2 gas without C, the CO-dark H2, in a large sample of clouds. Aims: To use a sparse Galactic plane survey of the 1.9 THz [C II] spectral line from the Herschel Open Time Key Programme, Galactic Observations of Terahertz C+ (GOT C+), to characterize the H2 gas without CO in a statistically significant sample of clouds. Methods: We identify individual clouds in the inner Galaxy by fitting [CII] and CO isotopologue spectra along each line of sight. We combine these with HI spectra, along with excitation models and cloud models of C+, to determine the column densities and fractional mass of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Atmospheric Ozone and Climate · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
