HI filaments are cold and associated with dark molecular gas. HI4PI based estimates of the local diffuse CO-dark H2 distribution


Abstract in English

Context. There are significant amounts of H2 in the Milky Way. Due to its symmetry H2 does not radiate at radio frequencies. CO is thought to be a tracer for H2, however CO is formed at significantly higher opacities than H2. Thus, toward high Galactic latitudes significant amounts of H2 are hidden and called CO-dark. Aims. We demonstrate that the dust-to-gas ratio is a tool to identify locations and column densities of CO-dark H2. Methods. We adopt the hypothesis of a constant E(B-V)/NH ratio, independent of phase transitions from HI to H2. We investigate the Doppler temperatures TD, from a Gaussian decomposition of HI4PI data, to study temperature dependencies of E(B-V)/NHI. Results. The E(B-V)/NHI ratio in the cold HI gas phase is high in comparison to the warmer one. We consider this as evidence that cold HI gas toward high Galactic latitudes is associated with H2. Beyond CO-bright regions we find for TD < 1165 K a correlation (NHI + 2NH2 )/NHI prop -log T_D. In combination with a factor XCO = 4.0 10 20 cm^-2 (K km s^-1 )-1 this yields for the full-sky NH /E(B-V) sim 5.1 to 6.7 10^21 cm^-2 mag^-1, compatible with X-ray scattering and UV absorption line observations. Conclusions. Cold HI with T_D < 1165 K contains on average 46% CO-dark H2. Prominent filaments have TD < 220 K and typical excitation temperatures Tex sim 50 K. With a molecular gas fraction of > 61% they are dominated dynamically by H2.

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