The CO-dark molecular gas in the cold HI arc
Gan Luo, Di Li, Zhi-yu Zhang, Thomas G. Bisbas, Ningyu Tang, Lingrui, Lin, Yichen Sun, Pei Zuo, and Jing Zhou

TL;DR
This study confirms the presence of CO-dark molecular gas in the outer Milky Way, revealing properties similar to nearby diffuse clouds and suggesting that supershell expansion may trigger molecular cloud formation.
Contribution
First detection of HINSA in the outer Galactic disk, providing new insights into DMG properties beyond the Solar neighborhood.
Findings
HINSA detected in the outer disk at 13 kpc from Galactic center
H$_2$ column density estimated at ~10^{20} cm$^{-2}$, higher than previous estimates
DMG properties such as extinction and density are similar to nearby diffuse clouds
Abstract
The CO-dark molecular gas (DMG), which refers to the molecular gas not traced by CO emission, is crucial for the evolution of the interstellar medium (ISM). While the gas properties of DMG have been widely explored in the Solar neighborhood, whether or not they are similar in the outer disk regions of the Milky Way is still not well understood. In this Letter, we confirm the existence of DMG toward a cold HI arc structure at 13 kpc away from the Galactic center with both OH emission and HI narrow self-absorption (HINSA). This is the first detection of HINSA in the outer disk region, in which the HINSA fraction (/ = 0.0220.011) is an order of magnitude higher than the average value observed in nearby evolved dark clouds, but is consistent with that of the early evolutionary stage of dark clouds. The inferred H column density from both extinction and…
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