The ATLASGAL survey: distribution of cold dust in the Galactic plane. Combination with Planck data
T. Csengeri, A. Weiss, F. Wyrowski, K. M. Menten, J. S. Urquhart, S., Leurini, F. Schuller, H. Beuther, S. Bontemps, L. Bronfman, Th. Henning, N., Schneider

TL;DR
This study combines ATLASGAL and Planck data to map cold dust in the Galactic plane, revealing large-scale structures, estimating dense gas fractions, and providing insights into star formation efficiency in different Galactic regions.
Contribution
It integrates ground-based and space-based observations to analyze cold dust distribution, dense gas fraction, and star formation in the inner Galaxy with improved spatial coverage.
Findings
Extended dust structures over 30 pc in the inner Galaxy.
Dense gas fraction estimated at 2-5% in the Galactic plane.
Galactic star formation rate estimated at 1.3 solar masses per year.
Abstract
Sensitive ground-based submillimeter surveys, such as ATLASGAL, provide a global view on the distribution of cold dense gas in the Galactic plane. Here we use the 353 GHz maps from the Planck/HFI instrument to complement the ground-based APEX/LABOCA observations with information on larger angular scales. The resulting maps reveal the distribution of cold dust in the inner Galaxy with a larger spatial dynamic range. We find examples of elongated structures extending over angular scales of 0.5 degree. Corresponding to >30 pc structures in projection at a distance of 3 kpc, these dust lanes are very extended and show large aspect ratios. Furthermore, we assess the fraction of dense gas (), and estimate 2-5% (above A7 mag) on average in the Galactic plane. PDFs of the column density reveal the typically observed log-normal distribution for low- and exhibit an excess…
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