-
Articles citing this article
-
Same authors
- Recommend this article
- Download citation
- Alert me if this article is cited
- Alert me if this article is corrected
|
||||||||||||||||||
A&A 472, 509-517 (2007)
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:20077685
SPEAR far UV spectral imaging of highly ionized emission from the North Galactic Pole region
B. Y. Welsh1, J. Edelstein1, E. J. Korpela1, J. Kregenow1, M. Sirk1, K.-W. Min2, J. W. Park2, K. Ryu2, H. Jin3, I.-S. Yuk3, and J.-H. Park31 Space Sciences Laboratory, University of California, 7 Gauss Way, Berkeley, CA 94720, USA
e-mail: bwelsh@ssl.berkeley.edu
2 Korea Advanced Institute of Science & Technology, 305-70 Daejeon, Korea
3 Korea Astronomy & Space Science Institute, 305-348 Daejeon, Korea
(Received 20 April 2007 / Accepted 25 May 2007 )
Abstract
Aims.We present far ultraviolet (FUV: 912-1750 Å) spectral imaging
observations recorded with the
satellite
of the interstellar OVI (1032 Å), CIV (1550 Å), SiIV (1394 Å), SiII* (1533 Å) and AlII (1671 Å)
emission lines originating
in a 60
rectangular region lying close to the North Galactic Pole.
These data represent the first large area, moderate spatial resolution maps of the
distribution of UV spectral-line emission originating the
both the highly ionized medium (HIM) and the warm ionized medium (WIM)
recorded at high galactic latitudes.
Methods.By assessing and removing a local continuum level that underlies these
emission line spectra, we have obtained interstellar emission intensity maps for the aforementioned
lines constructed
in 8
spatial bins on the sky.
Results.Our maps of OVI, CIV, SiIV and SiII* line emission show the highest intensity levels
being spatially coincident with similarly high levels of soft X-ray emission originating
in the edge of the Northern Polar Spur feature. However, the distribution of the low
ionization AlII emission does not show this spatial correlation, and suggests that
warm-neutral and/or partially ionized gas with a temperature <20 000 K may be quite pervasive at
high galactic latitudes.
Key words: ISM: atoms -- ultraviolet: ISM
© ESO 2007
| What is OpenURL? |
- If your librarian has set up your subscription with an OpenURL resolver, OpenURL links appear automatically on the abstract pages.
- You can define your own OpenURL resolver with your EDPS Account. In this case your choice will be given priority over that of your library.
- You can use an add-on for your browser (Firefox or I.E.) to display OpenURL links on a page (see http://www.openly.com/openurlref/). You should disable this module if you wish to use the OpenURL server that you or your library have defined.

BibSonomy
CiteUlike
Connotea
Del.icio.us
Digg
Facebook