Molecular gas distribution perpendicular to the Galactic plane
Yang Su, Ji Yang, Qing-Zeng Yan, Shaobo Zhang, Hongchi Wang, Yan Sun,, Zhiwei Chen, Chen Wang, Xin Zhou, Xuepeng Chen, Zhibo Jiang, and Min Wang

TL;DR
This study maps the vertical distribution of molecular clouds in the Milky Way, revealing a thin and thick disk component with detailed properties of high-z clouds, enhancing understanding of Galactic structure.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed characterization of the molecular gas distribution perpendicular to the Galactic plane, including properties of high-z molecular clouds.
Findings
The molecular disk has two components with thicknesses of ~85pc and ~280pc.
High-z molecular clouds are faint with median temperature 2.1 K and radius 2.5pc.
The velocity dispersion of clouds varies with Galactocentric radius, supporting a mass density model.
Abstract
We use the ~370 square degrees data from the MWISP CO survey to study the vertical distribution of the molecular clouds (MCs) toward the tangent points in the region of l=[16,52]deg and |b|<5.1deg. The molecular disk consists of two components with the layer thickness (FWHM) of ~85pc and ~280pc, respectively. In the inner Galaxy, the molecular mass in the thin disk is dominant, while the molecular mass traced by the discrete MCs with weak CO emission in the thick disk is probably <10% of the whole molecular disk. For the CO gas in the thick disk, we identified 1055 high-z MCs that are >100pc from the Galactic plane. However, only a few samples (i.e., 32 MCs) are located in the |z|>360pc region. Typically, the discrete MCs of the thick disk population have a median peak temperature of 2.1 K, a median velocity dispersion of 0.8km/s, and a median effective radius of 2.5pc. The median…
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