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Gas and dust properties in the Chamaeleon molecular cloud complex have been investigated with emission lines from atomic hydrogen (HI) and 12CO molecule, dust optical depth at 353 GHz ($tau_{353}$), and $J$-band infrared extinction ($A_{J}$). We have found a scatter correlation between the HI integrated intensity ($W_{rm HI}$) and $tau_{353}$ in the Chamaeleon region. The scattering has been examined in terms of possible large optical depth in HI emission ($tau_{rm HI}$) using a total column density ($N_{rm H}$) model based on $tau_{353}$. A nonlinear relation of $tau_{353}$ with the $sim$1.2 power of $A_{J}$ has been found in opaque regions ($A_{J}$ $gtrsim$ 0.3 mag), which may indicate dust evolution effect. If we apply this nonlinear relation to the $N_{rm H}$ model (i.e., $N_{rm H} propto tau_{353}^{1/1.2}$) allowing arbitrary $tau_{rm HI}$, the model curve reproduces well the $W_{rm HI}$-$tau_{353}$ scatter correlation, suggesting optically thick HI ($tau_{rm HI} sim$1.3) extended around the molecular clouds. Based on the correlations between the CO integrated intensity and the $N_{rm H}$ model, we have then derived the CO-to-H$_{2}$ conversion factor ($X_{rm CO}$) on $sim$1.5$^{circ}$ scales (corresponding to $sim$4 persec) and found spatial variations of $X_{rm CO}$ $sim$(0.5-3)$times$10$^{20}$ cm$^{-2}$ K$^{-1}$ km$^{-1}$ s across the cloud complex, possibly depending on the radiation field inside or surrounding the molecular clouds. These gas properties found in the Chamaeleon region are discussed through a comparison with other local molecular cloud complexes.
We report a Fermi-LAT $gamma$-ray analysis for the Chamaeleon molecular-cloud complex using a total column density (NH) model based on the dust optical depth at 353 GHz ($tau_{353}$) with the Planck thermal dust emission model. Gamma rays with energy
We present an analysis of the HI and CO gas in conjunction with the Planck/IRAS submillimeter/far-infrared dust properties toward the most outstanding high latitude clouds MBM 53, 54, 55 and HLCG 92-35 at b = -30 deg to -45 deg. The CO emission, dust
The local interstellar medium (ISM) is suffused with dark gas, identified by excess infrared and gamma ray emission, yet undetected by standard ISM tracers such as neutral hydrogen (HI) or carbon monoxide emission. Based on observed dust properties f
We present synthetic Hi and CO observations of a simulation of decaying turbulence in the thermally bistable neutral medium. We first present the simulation, with clouds initially consisting of clustered clumps. Self-gravity causes these clump cluste
Comparison analyses between the gas emission data (HI 21cm line and CO 2.6 mm line) and the Planck/IRAS dust emission data (optical depth at 353 GHz tau353 and dust temperature Td) allow us to estimate the amount and distribution of the hydrogen gas