High-velocity gas towards the LMC resides in the Milky Way halo
P. Richter, K.S. de Boer, K. Werner, T. Rauch

TL;DR
This study investigates the origin of high-velocity gas near the LMC, concluding it resides in the Milky Way halo with low metallicity, rather than being material expelled from the LMC itself.
Contribution
It provides new spectroscopic evidence that high-velocity gas towards the LMC is part of the Milky Way halo, not LMC outflows, based on absorption line analysis and metallicity measurements.
Findings
High-velocity gas is located in the Milky Way halo.
The gas has low metallicity (~0.2 solar).
The gas does not participate in Galactic rotation.
Abstract
To explore the origin of high-velocity gas in the direction of the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC) we analyze absorption lines in the ultraviolet spectrum of a Galactic halo star that is located in front of the LMC at d=9.2 kpc distance. We study the velocity-component structure of low and intermediate metal ions in the spectrum of RXJ0439.8-6809, as obtained with the Cosmic Origins Spectrograph (COS) onboard HST, and measure equivalent widths and column densities for these ions. We supplement our COS data with a Far-Ultraviolet Spectroscopic Explorer spectrum of the nearby LMC star Sk-69 59 and with HI 21cm data from the Leiden-Argentina-Bonn (LAB) survey. Metal absorption towards RXJ0439.8-6809 is unambiguously detected in three different velocity components near v_LSR=0,+60, and +150 km/s. The presence of absorption proves that all three gas components are situated in front of the star,…
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