Detection of the Milky Way spiral arms in dust from 3D mapping
Sara Rezaei Kh., Coryn A.L. Bailer-Jones, David W. Hogg, and Mathias, Schultheis

TL;DR
This paper presents a continuous 3D dust map of the Milky Way's disk out to 7 kpc, revealing spiral arm structures and molecular clouds using a non-parametric Gaussian Process method on stellar survey data.
Contribution
It introduces a novel non-parametric Gaussian Process approach to map dust density in 3D, capturing Galactic structures without prior assumptions.
Findings
First continuous 3D dust map of the Galactic disk
Detection of spiral arm features in dust distribution
Constraints on distances to molecular clouds
Abstract
Large stellar surveys are sensitive to interstellar dust through the effects of reddening. Using extinctions measured from photometry and spectroscopy, together with three-dimensional (3D) positions of individual stars, it is possible to construct a three-dimensional dust map. We present the first continuous map of the dust distribution in the Galactic disk out to 7 kpc within 100 pc of the Galactic midplane, using red clump and giant stars from SDSS APOGEE DR14. We use a non-parametric method based on Gaussian Processes to map the dust density, which is the local property of the ISM rather than an integrated quantity. This method models the dust correlation between points in 3D space and can capture arbitrary variations, unconstrained by a pre-specified functional form. This produces a continuous map without line-of-sight artefacts. Our resulting map traces some features of the local…
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