Revisiting the Vertical Distribution of HI Absorbing Clouds in the Solar Neighborhood. II. Constraints from a Large Catalog of 21 cm Absorption Observations at High Galactic Latitudes
Daniel R. Rybarczyk, Trey V. Wenger, Snezana Stanimirovi\'c

TL;DR
This study constrains the vertical distribution of cold neutral hydrogen in the solar neighborhood, revealing a thinner structure than previously thought and suggesting a well-mixed relationship with molecular clouds, based on extensive HI absorption data.
Contribution
It provides new measurements of the CNM's vertical thickness using a large catalog of HI absorption observations and introduces the kinematic_scaleheight software for this purpose.
Findings
CNM thickness in the solar neighborhood is 50-90 pc, smaller than previous estimates.
Thinner CNM structures are associated with higher optical depths and column densities.
Approximately 20% of CNM structures are outliers, linked to the Local Bubble wall.
Abstract
The cold neutral medium (CNM) is where neutral atomic hydrogen (HI) is converted into molecular clouds, so the structure and kinematics of the CNM are key drivers of galaxy evolution. Here we provide new constraints on the vertical distribution of the CNM using the recently-developed \texttt{kinematic_scaleheight} software package and a large catalog of sensitive HI absorption observations. We estimate the thickness of the CNM in the solar neighborhood to be , assuming a Gaussian vertical distribution. This is a factor of smaller than typically assumed, indicating the thickness of the CNM in the solar neighborhood is similar to that found in the inner Galaxy, consistent with recent simulation results. If we consider only structures with HI optical depths or column densities ,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomical Observations and Instrumentation · Solar and Space Plasma Dynamics
