All-sky census of Galactic high-latitude molecular intermediate-velocity clouds
T. R\"ohser, J. Kerp, D. Lenz, and B. Winkel

TL;DR
This study conducts a comprehensive all-sky survey of high-latitude molecular intermediate-velocity clouds in the Milky Way, revealing their distribution, quantity, and potential role in fueling star formation.
Contribution
It provides the first large-scale catalog of molecular IVC candidates, enhancing understanding of Galactic gas inflow and the molecular component in the halo.
Findings
Identified 239 MIVC candidates across the sky.
Recovered all known MIVCs except one.
Suggests IVC inflow could sustain Galactic star formation.
Abstract
The HI halo clouds of the Milky Way, and in particular the intermediate-velocity clouds (IVCs), are thought to be connected to Galactic fountain processes. Observations of fountain clouds are important for understanding the role of matter recycling and accretion onto the Galactic disk and subsequent star formation. Here, we quantify the amount of molecular gas in the Galactic halo. We focus on the rare class of molecular IVCs (MIVCs) and search for new objects. The HI-FIR correlation was studied across the entire northern and southern Galactic hemispheres at Galactic latitudes to determine the amount and distribution of molecular gas in IVCs. We used the most recent large-scale HI and FIR data, the Effelsberg Bonn-HI Survey, the Parkes Galactic All-Sky Survey, and the Planck FIR surveys. We present a catalogue of 239 MIVC candidates on the northern and southern Galactic…
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