The history of dynamics and stellar feedback revealed by the HI filamentary structure in the disk of the Milky Way
J.D. Soler, H. Beuther, J. Syed, Y. Wang, L.D. Anderson, S.C.O., Glover, P. Hennebelle, M. Heyer, Th. Henning, A.F. Izquierdo, R.S. Klessen,, H. Linz, N.M. McClure-Griffiths, J. Ott, S.E. Ragan, M. Rugel, N. Schneider,, R.J. Smith, M.C. Sormani, J.M. Stil, R. Tre\ss

TL;DR
This study analyzes the filamentary structures in neutral hydrogen emission in the Milky Way, revealing their alignment with Galactic dynamics, the influence of supernova feedback, magnetic fields, and gas inflow, providing insights into interstellar medium behavior.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive analysis of HI filament orientations across the Milky Way, linking observed structures to large-scale dynamics, supernova feedback, and magnetic fields, using advanced statistical and simulation comparisons.
Findings
Most HI filaments align with the Galactic plane.
Vertical filaments are associated with supernova feedback and magnetic fields.
Filament orientations vary with Galactic longitude and velocity.
Abstract
We present a study of the filamentary structure in the emission from the neutral atomic hydrogen (HI) at 21 cm across velocity channels in the 40'' and 1.5-km/s resolution position-position-velocity cube resulting from the combination of the single-dish and interferometric observations in The HI/OH/Recombination (THOR) line survey. Using the Hessian matrix method in combination with tools from circular statistics, we find that the majority of the filamentary structures in the HI emission are aligned with the Galactic plane. Part of this trend can be assigned to long filamentary structures that are coherent across several velocity channels. However, we also find ranges of Galactic longitude and radial velocity where the HI filamentary structures are preferentially oriented perpendicular to the Galactic plane. These are located (i) around the tangent point of the Scutum spiral arm, $l…
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