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We use a model of the Galactic fountain to simulate the neutral-hydrogen emission of the Milky Way Galaxy. The model was developed to account for data on external galaxies with sensitive HI data. For appropriate parameter values, the model reproduces well the HI emission observed at Intermediate Velocities. The optimal parameters imply that cool gas is ionised as it is blasted out of the disc, but becomes neutral when its vertical velocity has been reduced by ~30 per cent. The parameters also imply that cooling of coronal gas in the wakes of fountain clouds transfers gas from the virial-temperature corona to the disc at ~2 Mo/yr. This rate agrees, to within the uncertainties with the accretion rate required to sustain the Galaxys star formation without depleting the supply of interstellar gas. We predict the radial profile of accretion, which is an important input for models of Galactic chemical evolution. The parameter values required for the model to fit the Galaxys HI data are in excellent agreement with values estimated from external galaxies and hydrodynamical studies of cloud-corona interaction. Our model does not reproduce the observed HI emission at High Velocities, consistent with High Velocity Clouds being extragalactic in origin. If our model is correct, the structure of the Galaxys outer HI disc differs materially from that used previously to infer the distribution of dark matter on the Galaxys outskirts.
We investigate data from the Galactic Effelsberg--Bonn HI Survey (EBHIS), supplemented with data from the third release of the Galactic All Sky Survey (GASS III) observed at Parkes. We explore the all sky distribution of the local Galactic HI gas wit
We address the spatial scale, ionization structure, mass and metal content of gas at the Milky Way disk-halo interface detected as absorption in the foreground of seven closely-spaced, high-latitude halo blue horizontal branch stars (BHBs) with heigh
The hot gaseous halos of galaxies likely contain a large amount of mass and are an integral part of galaxy formation and evolution. The Milky Way has a 2e6 K halo that is detected in emission and by absorption in the OVII resonance line against brigh
We analyze radial and azimuthal variations of the phase balance between the molecular and atomic ISM in the Milky Way. In particular, the azimuthal variations -- between spiral arm and interarm regions -- are analyzed without any explicit definition
We compare molecular gas properties in the starbursting center of NGC253 and the Milky Way Galactic Center (GC) on scales of ~1-100 pc using dendograms and resolution-, area- and noise-matched datasets in CO (1-0) and CO (3-2). We find that the size-