We describe a moderate-resolution FUSE mini-survey of H2 in the Milky Way and Magellanic Clouds, using four hot stars and four AGN as background sources. FUSE spectra of nearly every stellar and extragalactic source exhibit numerous absorption lines from the H2 Lyman and Werner bands between 912 and 1120 A. One extragalactic sightline, PKS 2155-304, with low N(HI) shows no detectable H2 and could be the Lockman Hole of molecular gas, of importance for QSO absorption-line studies. We measure H2 column densities in low rotational states (J = 0 and 1) to derive rotational and/or kinetic temperatures of diffuse interstellar gas. The higher-J abundances can constrain models of the UV radiation fields and gas densities. In three optically thick clouds toward extragalactic sources, we find n(H) ~ 30-50 cm(-3) and cloud thicknesses of 2-3 pc. The rotational temperatures for H2 at high Galactic latitude, <T_01> = 107 +/- 17 K (seven sightlines) and 120 +/- 13 K (three optically thick clouds), are higher than those in the Copernicus sample composed primarily of targets in the disk. We find no evidence for great differences in the abundance or state of excitation of H2 between sight lines in the Galaxy and those in the SMC and LMC. In the future, we will probe the distribution and physical parameters of diffuse molecular gas in the disk and halo and in the lower-metallicity environs of the LMC and SMC.
We report results from a FUSE survey of interstellar molecular hydrogen (H2) in the Galactic disk toward 139 O-type and early B-type stars at Galactic latitudes $|b| < 10^{circ}$, with updated photometric and parallax distances. The H2 absorption is measured using the far-ultraviolet Lyman and Werner bands, including strong R(0), R(1), and P(1) lines from rotational levels $J = 0$ and $J = 1$ and excited states up to $J = 5$ (sometimes $J = 6$ and 7). For each sight line, we report column densities $N_{H2}$, $N_{HI}$, $N(J)$, $N_H = N_{HI} + 2N_{H2}$, and molecular fraction, $f_{H2} = 2N_{H2}/N_H$. Our survey extends the 1977 Copernicus H2 survey up to $N_H sim 5times10^{21}$ cm$^{-2}$. The lowest rotational states have mean excitation temperatures and rms dispersions, $T_{01} = 88pm 20$ K and $T_{02} = 77pm18$ K, suggesting that J = 0,1,2 are coupled to the gas kinetic temperature. Populations of higher-J states exhibit mean excitation temperatures, $T_{24} = 237pm91$ K and $T_{35} = 304pm108$ K, produced primarily by UV radiative pumping. Correlations of $f_{H2}$ with E(B-V) and N_H show a transition to $f_{H2} geq 0.1$ at $N_ H geq 10^{21}$ cm$^{-2}$ and $E(B-V) > 0.2$, interpreted with an analytic model of H2 formation-dissociation equilibrium and attenuation of the far-UV radiation field by self-shielding and dust opacity. Results of this disk survey are compared to previous FUSE studies of H2 in translucent clouds, at high Galactic latitudes, and in the Magellanic Clouds. Using updated distances to the target stars, we find average sight-line values $langle f_{H2} rangle geq 0.20$ and $langle N_H/E(B-V) rangle = (6.07pm1.01)times10^{21}$ cm$^{-2}$ mag$^{-1}$.
Diffuse far-ultraviolet (FUV: 1370-1670 A) flux from the Taurus molecular cloud region has been observed with the SPEAR/FIMS imaging spectrograph. An FUV continuum map of the Taurus region, similar to the visual extinction maps, shows a distinct cloud core and halo region. The dense cloud core, where the visual extinction is A_v > 1.5, obscures the background diffuse FUV radiation, while a scattered FUV radiation is seen in and beyond the halo region where A_v < 1.5. The total intensity of H2 fluorescence in the cloud halo is I_{H2} = 6.5 x 10^4 photons cm^{-2} s^{-1} sr^{-1} in the 1370-1670 A wavelength band. A synthetic model of the H2 fluorescent emission fits the present observation best with a hydrogen density n_H = 50 cm^{-3}, H2 column density N(H2) = 0.8 x 10^{20} cm^{-2}, and an incident FUV intensity I_{UV} = 0.2. H2 fluorescence is not seen in the core presumably because the required radiation flux to induce fluorescence is unable to penetrate the core region.
We have analysed FUSE far-UV spectra of a sample of 16 local starbursts. These galaxies span ranges of almost three orders-of-magnitude in star formation rate and over two orders-of-magnitude in stellar mass. We find that the strongest interstellar absorption-lines are generally blueshifted relative to the galaxy systemic velocity by ~50 to 300 km/s, implying the presence of starburst-driven galactic outflows. The outflow velocites increase on-average with the star formation rate and the star formation rate per unit mass. We find that outflowing coronal-phase (T ~ several hundred thousand K) gas detected via the OVI 1032 absorption line in nearly every galaxy. The kinematics of this outflowing gas differs from the lower-ionization material, and agrees with predictions for radiatively cooling gas (most likely created at the interface between the hot outrushing gas traced by X-rays and cool ambient material). Emission from the coronal gas is not generally detected, implying that radiative cooling by this phase is not affecting the dynamics/energetics of the wind. We find that the weaker interstellar absorption lines lie close to the systemic velocity, implying that the outflowing gas has a lower column density than the quiescent gas in the starburst. From direct observation below the Lyman edge and from the small residual intensity at the core of the CII 1036 line, we conclude that the absolute escape fraction of ionizing radiation is small (typically less than a few percent). This sample provides a unique window on the global properties of local starburst galaxies and a useful comparison sample for understanding spectra of high redshift galaxies.
Thanks to their proximity, local starbursts are perfectly suited for high-resolution and sensitivity multiwavelength observations aimed to test our ideas about star formation, evolution of massive stars, physics and chemical evolution of the interstellar medium (ISM). High-resolution UV spectroscopy with FUSE and STIS has recently given the possibility to characterize in great detail the neutral ISM in local starbursts thanks to the presence in this spectral range of many absorption lines from ions of the most common heavy elements. Here we present the results for two nearby starburst galaxies, I Zw 18 and NGC 1705, and show how these results relate to the star-formation history and evolutionary state of these stellar systems.