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Complex C: A Low-Metallicity, High-Velocity Cloud Plunging into the Milky Way

Authors :
Richard F. Green
Bruce E. Woodgate
Todd M. Tripp
Edward B. Jenkins
Charles L. Joseph
Anthony C. Danks
Jeffrey L. Linsky
Mary Elizabeth Kaiser
Charles W. Bowers
Bart P. Wakker
S. R. Heap
Source :
The Astronomical Journal. 125:3122-3144
Publication Year :
2003
Publisher :
American Astronomical Society, 2003.

Abstract

(Abridged) We present a new high-resolution (7 km/s FWHM) echelle spectrum of 3C 351 obtained with STIS. 3C 351 lies behind the low-latitude edge of high-velocity cloud Complex C, and the new spectrum provides accurate measurements of O I, Si II, Al II, Fe II, and Si III absorption lines at the velocity of the HVC. We use collisional and photoionization models to derive ionization corrections; in both models we find that the overall metallicity Z = 0.1 - 0.3 Z_{solar} in Complex C, but nitrogen must be underabundant. The iron abundance indicates that Complex C contains very little dust. The absorbing gas probably is not gravitationally confined. The gas could be pressure-confined by an external medium, but alternatively we may be viewing the leading edge of the HVC, which is ablating and dissipating as it plunges into the Milky Way. O VI column densities observed with FUSE toward nine QSOs/AGNs behind Complex C support this conclusion: N(O VI) is highest near 3C 351, and the O VI/H I ratio increases substantially with decreasing latitude, suggesting that the lower-latitude portion of the cloud is interacting more vigorously with the Galaxy. The other sight lines through Complex C show some dispersion in metallicity, but with the current uncertainties, the measurements are consistent with a constant metallicity throughout the HVC. However, all of the Complex C sight lines require significant nitrogen underabundances. Finally, we compare the 3C 351 sight line to the sight line to the nearby QSO H1821+643 to search for evidence of outflowing Galactic fountain gas that could be mixing with Complex C. We find that the intermediate-velocity gas detected toward 3C 351 and H1821+643 has a higher metallicity and may well be a fountain/chimney outflow from the Perseus spiral arm.<br />Submitted to AJ. Figures 1-4 compressed for astro-ph; better quality figures are available at http://astro.princeton.edu/~tripp/astro/qualitypreps/complexc.ps.gz

Details

ISSN :
15383881 and 00046256
Volume :
125
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Astronomical Journal
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ef7f251af0d74002581a414cb47e02d7
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1086/374995