On the distance to the North Polar Spur and the local CO-H2 factor
R. Lallement, S. Snowden, K.D. Kuntz, T.M. Dame, D. Koutroumpa, I., Grenier, J.M. Casandjian

TL;DR
This study uses X-ray and dust observations to constrain the distance to the North Polar Spur, suggesting it is likely far beyond 300 parsecs and possibly associated with distant Galactic structures.
Contribution
It provides new constraints on the NPS distance and the CO-H2 conversion factor using multi-wavelength data and absorption analysis, challenging the closer proximity models.
Findings
NPS is likely beyond 300 pc, possibly far beyond the Local Arm.
The CO-H2 conversion factor is constrained to ≤ 0.75 x 10^{20} cm^{-2} K^{-1} km^{-1} s.
Absorbing columns correlate strongly with dust maps, indicating a larger distance to the NPS.
Abstract
Most models identify the X-ray bright North Polar Spur (NPS) with a hot interstellar (IS) bubble in the Sco-Cen star-forming region at 130 pc. An opposite view considers the NPS as a distant structure associated with Galactic nuclear outflows. Constraints on the NPS distance can be obtained by comparing the foreground IS gas column inferred from X-ray absorption to the distribution of gas and dust along the line of sight. Absorbing columns towards shadowing molecular clouds simultaneously constrain the CO-H conversion factor. We derived the columns of X-ray absorbing matter NH(abs) from spectral fitting of dedicated XMM-Newton observations towards the NPS southern terminus (l=29{\deg}, b=+5 to +11{\deg}). The IS matter distribution was obtained from absorption lines in stellar spectra, 3D dust maps and emission data, including high spatial resolution CO measurements…
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