Exploring Hydrodynamic Instabilities along the Infalling High-Velocity Cloud Complex A
Kathleen A. Barger, David L. Nidever, Cannan Huey-You, Nicolas Lehner,, Katherine Rueff, Paris Freeman, Amber Birdwell, Bart P. Wakker, Joss, Bland-Hawthorn, Robert Benjamin, Drew A. Ciampa

TL;DR
This study uses detailed HI observations to analyze the structure, dynamics, and instabilities of the high-velocity cloud Complex A, revealing its deceleration, potential for reaching the Galactic plane, and signs of gas disruption.
Contribution
First detailed spectroscopic mapping of Complex A revealing its velocity gradient, deceleration, and signs of hydrodynamic instabilities affecting its evolution.
Findings
Complex A has a velocity gradient of 25 km/s per kpc.
It is decelerating at 55 km/s^2 and may reach the Galactic plane in less than 70 Myrs.
Signs of gas disruption include Rayleigh-Taylor and Kelvin-Helmholtz instabilities.
Abstract
Complex A is a high-velocity cloud that is traversing through the Galactic halo toward the Milky Way's disk. We combine both new and archival Green Bank Telescope observations to construct a spectroscopically resolved HI~21-cm map of this entire complex at a sensitivity for a line and or spatial resolution. We find that that Complex A is has a Galactic standard of rest frame velocity gradient of along its length, that it is decelerating at a rate of , and that it will reach the Galactic plane in if it can survive the journey. We have identify…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMeteorological Phenomena and Simulations · Tropical and Extratropical Cyclones Research · Aquatic and Environmental Studies
