Gaia Focused Product Release: Spatial distribution of two diffuse interstellar bands
Gaia Collaboration, M. Schultheis, H. Zhao, T. Zwitter, C. Ordenovic,, F. Pailler, C.A.L. Bailer-Jones, R. Carballo, R. Sordo, R. Drimmmel, M., Fouesneau, O. Creevey, U. Heiter, A. Recio-Blanco, G. Kordopatis, P. de, Laverny, D.J. Marshall, T.E. Dharmawardena

TL;DR
This study analyzes the spatial distribution of two diffuse interstellar bands using nearly six million Gaia stellar spectra, revealing their presence across the Galaxy and correlations with dust reddening, enhancing understanding of interstellar medium properties.
Contribution
The paper introduces a new method to empirically isolate DIB signals from stellar spectra and provides detailed all-sky maps of two DIBs, extending previous Gaia DR3 findings.
Findings
DIBs traced to larger distances, including outer spiral arms.
Detected DIB signals within the Local Bubble.
Found correlations between DIB strengths and dust reddening.
Abstract
Diffuse interstellar bands (DIBs) are absorption features seen in optical and infrared spectra of stars that are probably caused by large and complex molecules in the ISM. Here we investigate the Galactic distribution and properties of two DIBs identified in almost six million stellar spectra collected by the Gaia Radial Velocity Spectrometer. These measurements constitute a part of the Gaia Focused Product Release to be made public between the Gaia DR3 and DR4 data releases. In order to isolate the DIB signal from the stellar features in each individual spectrum, we identified a set of 160 000 spectra at high Galactic latitudes which we consider to be the DIB-free reference sample. Matching each target spectrum to its closest reference spectra in stellar parameter space allowed us to remove the stellar spectrum empirically, without reference to stellar models, leaving a set of six…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAtmospheric Ozone and Climate · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
