Loose threads: parsec-scale filamentation in the high Galactic latitude molecular clouds MBM 3 and MBM 16
Marco Monaci, Loris Magnani, Steven N. Shore

TL;DR
This study investigates the filamentary structures and turbulence in high galactic latitude molecular clouds MBM 3 and MBM 16 using spectroscopic and imaging data, revealing complex topology and superthermal linewidths due to filament superposition.
Contribution
It provides detailed analysis of filament topology and turbulence in these clouds, highlighting the role of projection effects and filament superposition in observed linewidths.
Findings
Filaments have lengths ~1 pc and widths ~0.1 pc.
Superthermal linewidths (~1 km/s) result from filament superposition.
MBM 16 decomposes into two adjacent structures.
Abstract
The existence of high galactic latitude molecular clouds has been known for several decades, and studies of their dust and gas distributions reveal complicated morphological structures. Their dynamics involve turbulence even in the absence of internal energy sources such as stars. We study in detail two such clouds, MBM 3 and MBM 16, trying to recover the geometric structure and topology of the gas distribution. In particular, we address the evidence of superthermal asymmetric atomic and molecular line profiles as a result of filament superposition combined with turbulent motions. We use a variety of spectroscopic and imaging archival observations of the gas and dust components. The spectroscopic data set comprises HI 21 cm, 12CO, 13CO, and CH line profiles. We also use archival infrared images to study the dust distribution and temperature. To understand the topology of MBM 3 and MBM…
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