A Three-Dimensional Map of Milky-Way Dust
Gregory M. Green, Edward F. Schlafly, Douglas P. Finkbeiner,, Hans-Walter Rix, Nicolas Martin, William Burgett, Peter W. Draper, Heather, Flewelling, Klaus Hodapp, Nicholas Kaiser, Rolf Peter Kudritzki, Eugene, Magnier, Nigel Metcalfe, Paul Price, John Tonry, Richard Wainscoat

TL;DR
This paper introduces a detailed three-dimensional map of interstellar dust in the Milky Way, derived from Pan-STARRS and 2MASS data, providing high-resolution insights into dust distribution and structure.
Contribution
The paper presents a novel 3D dust map with improved angular and distance resolution, validated against existing maps and stellar reddening estimates, covering three-quarters of the sky.
Findings
Map covers three-quarters of the sky out to several kiloparsecs.
Achieves a maximum distance resolution of ~25%.
Shows good agreement with Planck and SDSS-based reddening estimates.
Abstract
We present a three-dimensional map of interstellar dust reddening, covering three-quarters of the sky out to a distance of several kiloparsecs, based on Pan-STARRS 1 and 2MASS photometry. The map reveals a wealth of detailed structure, from filaments to large cloud complexes. The map has a hybrid angular resolution, with most of the map at an angular resolution of 3.4' to 13.7', and a maximum distance resolution of ~25%. The three-dimensional distribution of dust is determined in a fully probabilistic framework, yielding the uncertainty in the reddening distribution along each line of sight, as well as stellar distances, reddenings and classifications for 800 million stars detected by Pan-STARRS 1. We demonstrate the consistency of our reddening estimates with those of two-dimensional emission-based maps of dust reddening. In particular, we find agreement with the Planck 353 GHz optical…
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