Intermediate- and high-velocity clouds in the Milky Way I: covering factors and vertical heights
N. Lehner, J. C. Howk, A. Marasco, F. Fraternali

TL;DR
This study investigates the distribution, distances, and origins of intermediate- and high-velocity clouds in the Milky Way using ultraviolet spectra, revealing their confinement and potential role in star formation.
Contribution
It provides new measurements of cloud covering factors and scale-heights, clarifying the spatial distribution and possible origins of IVCs and HVCs in the Milky Way.
Findings
IVCs are confined within ~1.5 kpc of the Galactic plane.
HVC covering factor increases with height, reaching ~60% at 5-14 kpc.
VHVCs are mostly located beyond 10-15 kpc, at high velocities.
Abstract
Intermediate- and high-velocity clouds (IVCs, HVCs) are a potential source of fuel for star formation in the Milky Way (MW), but their origins and fates depend sensitively on their distances. We search for IVC and HVC in HST high-resolution ultraviolet spectra of 55 halo stars at vertical heights kpc. We show that IVCs ( km/s) have a high detection rate - the covering factor, - that is about constant () from to kpc, implying IVCs are essentially confined to kpc. For the HVCs ( km/s), we find increases from at kpc to at kpc, the latter value being similar to that found towards QSOs. In contrast, the covering factor of very high-velocity clouds (VHVCs, $|v_{\rm…
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