[CII] absorption and emission in the diffuse interstellar medium across the Galactic Plane
M. Gerin, M. Ruaud, J. R. Goicoechea, A. Gusdorf, B., Godard, M. de Luca, E. Falgarone, P. F. Goldsmith, D.C. Lis and, K. M. Menten, D. Neufeld, T.G. Phillips, H. Liszt

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution [CII], [OI], and atomic carbon observations to analyze the physical conditions of the diffuse interstellar medium in the Galactic plane, revealing the importance of foreground absorption and providing insights into gas properties and cooling processes.
Contribution
It combines absorption and emission spectroscopy with multiple lines to improve understanding of ISM phases and highlights the impact of foreground absorption on interpreting [CII] emission.
Findings
Foreground absorption can cancel emission signals, affecting interpretation.
Median gas pressure in diffuse ISM is about 5900 Kcm^-3.
Gas phase carbon abundance shows little variation with galactic radius.
Abstract
Ionized carbon is the main gas-phase reservoir of carbon in the neutral diffuse interstellar medium and its 158 micron fine structure transition [CII] is the most important cooling line of the diffuse interstellar medium (ISM). We combine [CII] absorption and emission spectroscopy to gain an improved understanding of physical conditions in the different phases of the ISM. We present high resolution [CII] spectra obtained with the Herschel/HIFI instrument towards bright dust continuum sources regions in the Galactic plane, probing simultaneously the diffuse gas along the line of sight and the background high-mass star forming regions. These data are complemented by observations of the 492 and 809 GHz fine structure lines of atomic carbon and by medium spectral resolution spectral maps of the fine structure lines of atomic oxygen at 63 and 145 microns with Herschel/PACS. We show that the…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
