New radio observations of anomalous microwave emission in the HII region RCW175
E.S. Battistelli (Rome-Sapienza), E. Carretti (Parkes-CSIRO), A., Cruciani (Rome-Sapienza), P. de Bernardis (Rome-Sapienza), R. Genova-Santos, (IAC-Tenerife), S. Masi (Rome-Sapienza), A. Naldi (Rome-Sapienza), R., Paladini (IPAC-CALTECH), F. Piacentini (Rome-Sapienza)

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution microwave observations of the HII region RCW175 to confirm anomalous microwave emission (AME), identify its sources, and analyze polarization, advancing understanding of AME origins and properties.
Contribution
It provides one of the first detailed AME maps at 13.5GHz, resolving multiple regions and modeling multiple spinning dust components with high angular resolution.
Findings
Confirmed AME in RCW175 with detailed spatial mapping.
Identified at least two spinning dust components with different densities.
Detected low polarization consistent with AME origin.
Abstract
We have observed the HII region RCW175 with the 64m Parkes telescope at 8.4GHz and 13.5GHz in total intensity, and at 21.5GHz in both total intensity and polarization. High angular resolution, high sensitivity, and polarization capability enable us to perform a detailed study of the different constituents of the HII region. For the first time, we resolve three distinct regions at microwave frequencies, two of which are part of the same annular diffuse structure. Our observations enable us to confirm the presence of anomalous microwave emission (AME) from RCW175. Fitting the integrated flux density across the entire region with the currently available spinning dust models, using physically motivated assumptions, indicates the presence of at least two spinning dust components: a warm component with a relatively large hydrogen number density n_H=26.3/cm^3 and a cold component with a…
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.
