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Far Ultraviolet Spectroscopic Explorer (FUSE) data is used to investigate the molecular hydrogen (H_2) content of intermediate-velocity clouds (IVCs) in the lower halo of the Milky Way. We analyze interstellar absorption towards 56 (mostly extragalactic) background sources to study H_2 absorption in the Lyman- and Werner bands in 61 IVC components at H I column densities >10^19 cm^-2. For data with good S/N (~9 per resolution element and higher), H_2 in IVC gas is convincingly detected in 14 cases at column densities varying between ~10^14 and ~10^17 cm^-2. We find an additional 17 possible H_2 detections in IVCs in FUSE spectra with lower S/N. The molecular hydrogen fractions, f, vary between 10^-6 and 10^-3, implying a dense, mostly neutral gas phase that is probably related to the Cold Neutral Medium (CNM) in these clouds. If the H_2 stays in formation-dissociation equlibrium, the CNM in these clouds can be characterized by compact (D~0.1 pc) filaments with volume densities on the order of n_H~30 cm^-3. The relatively high detection rate of H_2 in IVC gas implies that the CNM in these clouds is ubiquitous. More dense regions with much higher molecular fractions may exist, but it would be difficult to detect them in absorption because of their small size.
It is widely accepted that cosmic rays (CRs) up to at least PeV energies are Galactic in origin. Accelerated particles are injected into the interstellar medium where they propagate to the farthest reaches of the Milky Way, including a surrounding ha
Cosmic rays up to at least PeV energies are usually described in the framework of an elementary scenario that involves acceleration by objects that are located in the disk of the Milky Way, such as supernova remnants or massive star-forming regions,
The all-Galaxy CO survey of Dame, Hartmann, & Thaddeus (2001) is by far the most uniform, large-scale Galactic CO survey. Using a dendrogram-based decomposition of this survey, we present a catalog of 1064 massive molecular clouds throughout the Gala
We present a spectroscopic sample of 910 distant halo stars from the Hypervelocity Star survey from which we derive the velocity dispersion profile of the Milky Way halo. The sample is a mix of 74% evolved horizontal branch stars and 26% blue straggl
Supernovae from core-collapse of massive stars drive shocks into the molecular clouds from which the stars formed. Such shocks affect future star formation from the molecular clouds, and the fast-moving, dense gas with compressed magnetic fields is a