No Arabic abstract
We present a detailed study of an estimator of the HI column density, based on a combination of HI 21cm absorption and HI 21cm emission spectroscopy. This isothermal estimate is given by $N_{rm HI,ISO} = 1.823 times 10^{18} int left[ tau_{rm tot} times {rm T_B} right] / left[ 1 - e^{-tau_{rm tot}} right] {rm dV}$, where $tau_{rm tot}$ is the total HI 21cm optical depth along the sightline and ${rm T_B}$ is the measured brightness temperature. We have used a Monte Carlo simulation to quantify the accuracy of the isothermal estimate by comparing the derived $N_{rm HI,ISO}$ with the true HI column density $N_{rm HI}$. The simulation was carried out for a wide range of sightlines, including gas in different temperature phases and random locations along the path. We find that the results are statistically insensitive to the assumed gas temperature distribution and the positions of different phases along the line of sight. The median value of the ratio of the true H{sc i} column density to the isothermal estimate, $N_{rm HI}/{N_{rm HI, ISO}}$, is within a factor of 2 of unity while the 68.2% confidence intervals are within a factor of $approx 3$ of unity, out to high HI column densities, $le 5 times 10^{23}$,cm$^{-2}$ per 1 km s$^{-1}$ channel, and high total optical depths, $le 1000$. The isothermal estimator thus provides a significantly better measure of the HI column density than other methods, within a factor of a few of the true value even at the highest columns, and should allow us to directly probe the existence of high HI column density gas in the Milky Way.
The low column density gas at the outskirts of galaxies as traced by the 21 cm hydrogen line emission (HI) represents the interface between galaxies and the intergalactic medium, i.e., where galaxies are believed to get their supply of gas to fuel future episodes of star formation. Photoionization models predict a break in the radial profiles of HI at a column density of 5x10E+19 cm^-2 due to the lack of self-shielding against extragalactic ionizing photons. To investigate the prevalence of such breaks in galactic disks and to characterize what determines the potential edge of the HI disks, we study the azimuthally-averaged HI column density profiles of 17 nearby galaxies from The HI Nearby Galaxy Survey (THINGS) and supplemented in two cases with published Hydrogen Accretion in LOcal GAlaxieS (HALOGAS) data. To detect potential faint HI emission that would otherwise be undetected using conventional moment map analysis, we line up individual profiles to the same reference velocity and average them azimuthally to derive stacked radial profiles. To do so, we use model velocity fields created from a simple extrapolation of the rotation curves to align the profiles in velocity at radii beyond the extent probed with the sensitivity of traditional integrated HI maps. With this method, we improve our sensitivity to outer-disk HI emission by up to an order of magnitude. Except for a few disturbed galaxies, none show evidence for a sudden change in the slope of the HI radial profiles, the alleged signature of ionization by the extragalactic background.
We report a deep Giant Metrewave Radio Telescope (GMRT) search for Galactic H{sc i} 21cm absorption towards the quasar B0438$-$436, yielding the detection of wide, weak H{sc i} 21cm absorption, with a velocity-integrated H{sc i} 21cm optical depth of $0.0188 pm 0.0036$~km~s$^{-1}$. Comparing this with the H{sc i} column density measured in the Parkes Galactic All-Sky Survey gives a column density-weighted harmonic mean spin temperature of $3760 pm 365$~K, one of the highest measured in the Galaxy. This is consistent with most of the H{sc i} along the sightline arising in the stable warm neutral medium (WNM). The low peak H{sc i} 21cm optical depth towards B0438$-$436 implies negligible self-absorption, allowing a multi-Gaussian joint decomposition of the H{sc i} 21cm absorption and emission spectra. This yields a gas kinetic temperature of $rm T_k leq (4910 pm 1900)$~K, and a spin temperature of $rm T_s = (1000 pm 345)$~K for the gas that gives rise to the H{sc i} 21cm absorption. Our data are consistent with the H{sc i} 21cm absorption arising from either the stable WNM, with $rm T_s ll T_k$, $rm T_k approx 5000$~K, and little penetration of the background Lyman-$alpha$ radiation field into the neutral hydrogen, or from the unstable neutral medium, with $rm T_s approx T_k approx 1000;K$.
We have used the 610 MHz receivers of the Giant Metrewave Radio Telescope (GMRT) to detect associated HI 21cm absorption from the $z = 1.2230$ blazar TXS1954+513. The GMRT HI 21cm absorption is likely to arise against either the milli-arcsecond-scale core or the one-sided milli-arcsecond-scale radio jet, and is blueshifted by $approx 328$ km s$^{-1}$ from the blazar redshift. This is consistent with a scenario in which the HI cloud giving rise to the absorption is being driven outward by the radio jet. The integrated HI 21cm optical depth is $(0.716 pm 0.037)$ km s$^{-1}$, implying a high HI column density, $N_{rm HI} = (1.305 pm 0.067) times ({rm T_s/100: K}) times 10^{20}$ cm$^{-2}$, for an assumed HI spin temperature of 100 K. We use Nickel Telescope photometry of TXS1954+513 to infer a high rest-frame 1216 AA luminosity of $(4.1 pm 1.2) times 10^{23}$ W Hz$^{-1}$. The $z = 1.2230$ absorber towards TXS1954+513 is only the fifth case of a detection of associated HI 21cm absorption at $z > 1$, and is also the first case of such a detection towards an active galactic nucleus (AGN) with a rest-frame ultraviolet luminosity $gg 10^{23}$ W Hz$^{-1}$, demonstrating that neutral hydrogen can survive in AGN environments in the presence of high ultraviolet luminosities.
We present a census of neutral gas in the Milky Way disk and halo down to limiting column densities of $N$(HI)$sim10^{14}$ cm$^{-2}$ using measurements of HI Lyman-series absorption from the Far Ultraviolet Spectroscopic Explorer (FUSE). Our results are drawn from an analysis of 25 AGN sightlines spread evenly across the sky with Galactic latitude |b|$gtrsim 20^{circ}$. By simultaneously fitting multi-component Voigt profiles to 11 Lyman-series absorption transitions covered by FUSE (Ly$beta$-Ly$mu$) plus HST measurements of Ly$alpha$, we derive the kinematics and column densities of a sample of 152 HI absorption components. While saturation prevents accurate measurements of many components with column densities 17$lesssim$log$N$(HI)$lesssim$19, we derive robust measurements at log$N$(HI)$lesssim$17 and log$N$(HI)$gtrsim$19. We derive the first ultraviolet HI column density distribution function (CDDF) of the Milky Way, both globally and for low-velocity (ISM), intermediate-velocity clouds (IVCs), and high-velocity clouds (HVCs). We find that IVCs and HVCs show statistically indistinguishable CDDF slopes, with $beta_{rm IVC}=$ $-1.01_{-0.14}^{+0.15}$ and $beta_{rm HVC}=$ $-1.05_{-0.06}^{+0.07}$. Overall, the CDDF of the Galactic disk and halo appears shallower than that found by comparable extragalactic surveys, suggesting a relative abundance of high-column density gas in the Galactic halo. We derive the sky covering fractions as a function of HI column density, finding an enhancement of IVC gas in the northern hemisphere compared to the south. We also find evidence for an excess of inflowing HI over outflowing HI, with $-$0.88$pm$0.40 M$_odot$ yr$^{-1}$ of HVC inflow versus 0.20$pm$0.10 M$_odot$ yr$^{-1}$ of HVC outflow, confirming an excess of inflowing HVCs seen in UV metal lines.
We report results from a Giant Metrewave Radio Telescope search for associated redshifted HI 21cm absorption from 24 active galactic nuclei (AGNs), at $1.1 < z < 3.6$, selected from the Caltech-Jodrell Bank Flat-spectrum (CJF) sample. 22 out of 23 sources with usable data showed no evidence of absorption, with typical $3sigma$ optical depth detection limits of $approx 0.01$ at a velocity resolution of $approx 30$~km~s$^{-1}$. A single tentative absorption detection was obtained at $z approx 3.530$ towards TXS0604+728. If confirmed, this would be the highest redshift at which HI 21cm absorption has ever been detected. Including 29 CJF sources with searches for redshifted HI 21cm absorption in the literature, mostly at $z < 1$, we construct a sample of 52 uniformly-selected flat-spectrum sources. A Peto-Prentice two-sample test for censored data finds (at $approx 3sigma$ significance) that the strength of HI 21cm absorption is weaker in the high-$z$ sample than in the low-$z$ sample, this is the first statistically significant evidence for redshift evolution in the strength of HI 21cm absorption in a uniformly selected AGN sample. However, the two-sample test also finds that the HI 21cm absorption strength is higher in AGNs with low ultraviolet or radio luminosities, at $approx 3.4 sigma$ significance. The fact that the higher-luminosity AGNs of the sample typically lie at high redshifts implies that it is currently not possible to break the degeneracy between AGN luminosity and redshift evolution as the primary cause of the low HI 21cm opacities in high-redshift, high-luminosity active galactic nuclei.