Ionized gas in the Scutum spiral arm as traced in [N II] and [C II]
W. D. Langer, T. Velusamy, P. F. Goldsmith, J. L. Pineda, E. T., Chambers, G. Sandell, C. Risacher, and K. Jacobs

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution [N II] and [C II] observations to analyze the properties of the warm ionized medium at the Scutum spiral arm's edge, revealing highly ionized, dense gas and its likely compression by spiral arm dynamics.
Contribution
It provides detailed measurements of electron densities and ionized gas distribution in the Scutum arm, highlighting the impact of spiral arm potential on the WIM and ionized boundary layers.
Findings
Detected strong [N II] emission indicating highly ionized gas.
Found electron densities of about 0.9 cm^{-3} in the plane and 0.4 cm^{-3} above the plane.
Revealed dense ionized gas in molecular layers with n(e) ~ 30 cm^{-3}.
Abstract
Determining the properties of the warm ionized medium (WIM) at the leading edge of spiral arms is important for understanding its dynamics and cloud formation. The inner edge of the Scutum arm tangency is a unique location in which to disentangle the WIM from other components. We use high spectral resolution [C II] 158 micron and [N II] 205 micron fine structure line observations taken with the upGREAT and GREAT instruments on SOFIA, along with auxiliary HI and 13CO observations. The observations were in and out of the Galactic plane along 18 lines of sight between longitude 30deg and 32deg. We detect strong [N II] emission throughout the Scutum tangency. At VLSR = 110 to 125 km/s, where there is little, if any, 13CO, we could disentangle the [N II] and [C II] emission that arises from the WIM at the inner edge. We find an average electron density, <n(e)> about 0.9 cm{-3} in the plane,…
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