The "Maggie" filament: Physical properties of a giant atomic cloud
J. Syed, J. D. Soler, H. Beuther, Y. Wang, S. Suri, J. D. Henshaw, M., Riener, S. Bialy, S. Rezaei Kh., J. M. Stil, P. F. Goldsmith, M. R. Rugel, S., C. O. Glover, R. S. Klessen, J. Kerp, J. S. Urquhart, J. Ott, N. Roy, N., Schneider, R. J. Smith, S. N. Longmore, H. Linz

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery and analysis of 'Maggie', a giant atomic hydrogen filament in the Milky Way, revealing its physical properties, structure, and the role of galactic dynamics in its formation.
Contribution
The study presents high-resolution observations of a large atomic filament, providing new insights into its physical state and the influence of galactic potential on such structures.
Findings
Maggie is a 1.2 kpc long, mostly atomic HI filament with no active star formation.
The filament's mass is estimated at 7.2×10^5 solar masses, with a mean density of 4 cm^-3.
Velocity structure suggests it is driven by galactic potential rather than self-gravity.
Abstract
The atomic phase of the interstellar medium plays a key role in the formation process of molecular clouds. Due to the line-of-sight confusion in the Galactic plane that is associated with its ubiquity, atomic hydrogen emission has been challenging to study. Employing the high-angular resolution data from the THOR survey, we identify one of the largest, coherent, mostly atomic HI filaments in the Milky Way at the line-of-sight velocities around -54 km/s. The giant atomic filament "Maggie", with a total length of 1.2 kpc, is not detected in most other tracers, and does not show signs of active star formation. At a kinematic distance of 17 kpc, Maggie is situated below (by 500 pc) but parallel to the Galactic HI disk and is trailing the predicted location of the Outer Arm by 5-10 km/s in longitude-velocity space. The centroid velocity exhibits a smooth gradient of less than 3 km/s /10…
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