Appearance of Dusty Filaments at Different Viewing Angles
R.-A. Chira (ESO, MPIA), R. Siebenmorgen (ESO), Th. Henning (MPIA), J., Kainulainen (MPIA)

TL;DR
This study investigates how filament inclination affects dust observations in star-forming regions, revealing that total column density varies significantly with viewing angle, while dust temperature remains relatively unaffected, complicating the interpretation of filament structures.
Contribution
The paper introduces a numerical and radiative transfer modeling approach to assess how filament geometry and inclination influence dust-derived measurements, highlighting limitations in current observational diagnostics.
Findings
Total column density varies strongly with viewing angle.
Dust temperature remains largely insensitive to inclination.
Wide variations in column density at constant temperature suggest filament inclination.
Abstract
Context: In the last years, there have been many studies on the omnipresence and structures of filaments in star-forming regions, as well as their role in the process of star formation. Those filaments are normally identified as elongated fibres across the plane of the sky. But how would we detect filaments that are inclined? Aims: We aim to learn more about whether, and how, total column density or dust temperature change with respect to the line of sight. Such variations would enable observers to use dust observations to identify and study filaments at any inclination and gain more insight on the distribution and orientations of filaments within the Galactic plane. Methods: As a first step, we perform numerical calculations on simple cylindrical models to evaluate the influence of filament geometry on the average flux density. After that, we apply our three-dimensional Monte Carlo…
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