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23 April 2024 |
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Article overview
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On the Metallicity and Origin of the Smith High-Velocity Cloud | Andrew J. Fox
; Nicolas Lehner
; Felix J. Lockman
; Bart P. Wakker
; Alex S. Hill
; Fabian Heitsch
; David V. Stark
; Kathleen A. Barger
; Kenneth R. Sembach
; Mubdi Rahman
; | Date: |
15 Dec 2015 | Abstract: | The Smith Cloud is a gaseous high-velocity cloud (HVC) in an advanced state
of accretion, only 2.9 kpc below the Galactic plane and due to impact the disk
in 27 Myr. It is unique among HVCs in having a known distance (12.4+/-1.3 kpc)
and a well-constrained 3D velocity (296 km/s), but its origin has long remained
a mystery. Here we present the first absorption-line measurements of its
metallicity, using HST/COS UV spectra of three AGN lying behind the Cloud
together with Green Bank Telescope 21 cm spectra of the same directions. Using
Voigt-profile fitting of the S II 1250, 1253, 1259 triplet together with
ionization corrections derived from photoionization modeling, we derive the
sulfur abundance in each direction; a weighted average of the three
measurements gives [S/H]=-0.28+/-0.14, or 0.53+0.21-0.15 solar metallicity. The
finding that the Smith Cloud is metal-enriched lends support to scenarios where
it represents recycled Galactic material rather than the remnant of a dwarf
galaxy or accreting intergalactic gas. The metallicity and trajectory of the
Cloud are both indicative of an origin in the outer disk. However, its large
mass and prograde kinematics remain to be fully explained. If the cloud has
accreted cooling gas from the corona during its fountain trajectory, as
predicted in recent theoretical work, its current mass would be higher than its
launch mass, alleviating the mass concern. | Source: | arXiv, 1512.4957 | Services: | Forum | Review | PDF | Favorites |
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