CSIRO Publishing Books Journals About Us Shopping Cart You are here: Journals > PASA   
PASA
  Publications of the Astronomical Society of Australia
 
Search
 
 
  Advanced Search
   

Journal Home
About the Journal
Editorial Board
Contacts
Content
Online Early
Current Issue
Just Accepted
All Issues
Special Issues
Sample Issue
Call for Proposals
For Authors
General Information
Instructions to Authors
Submit Article
Open Access
For Referees
General Information
Review Article
For Subscribers
Subscription Prices
Customer Service

 Early Alert
Subscribe to our email Early Alert or RSS feeds for the latest journal papers.

 Connect with us
facebook   youtube

Training

Publication Workshops


 

Open Access Article << Previous     |         Contents Vol 25(4)

The Vertical Structure of Warm Ionised Gas in the Milky Way

B. M. Gaensler A D, G. J. Madsen A B, S. Chatterjee A, S. A. Mao C

A Institute of Astronomy, School of Physics, The University of Sydney, NSW 2006, Australia
B Department of Astronomy, University of Wisconsin, Madison, WI 53706, USA
C Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, Cambridge, MA 02138, USA
D Corresponding author. Email: bgaensler@usyd.edu.au
 
 Full Text
 PDF (474 KB)
 Export Citation
 Print
  


Abstract

We present a new joint analysis of pulsar dispersion measures and diffuse Hα emission in the Milky Way, which we use to derive the density, pressure and filling factor of the thick disk component of the warm ionised medium (WIM) as a function of height above the Galactic disk. By excluding sightlines at low Galactic latitude that are contaminated by Hii regions and spiral arms, we find that the exponential scale-height of free electrons in the diffuse WIM is 1830–250+120 pc, a factor of two larger than has been derived in previous studies. The corresponding inconsistent scale heights for dispersion measure and emission measure imply that the vertical profiles of mass and pressure in the WIM are decoupled, and that the filling factor of WIM clouds is a geometric response to the competing environmental influences of thermal and non-thermal processes. Extrapolating the properties of the thick-disk WIM to mid-plane, we infer a volume-averaged electron density 0.014 ± 0.001 cm–3, produced by clouds of typical electron density 0.34 ± 0.06 cm–3 with a volume filling factor 0.04 ± 0.01. As one moves off the plane, the filling factor increases to a maximum of ~30% at a height of ≈1–1.5 kpc, before then declining to accommodate the increasing presence of hot, coronal gas. Since models for the WIM with a ≈1 kpc scale-height have been widely used to estimate distances to radio pulsars, our revised parameters suggest that the distances to many high-latitude pulsars have been substantially underestimated.

Keywords: galaxies: ISM — Galaxy: halo, structure — globular clusters: general — ISM: structure — pulsars: general


   
    


 
Top  Email this page
 
Legal & Privacy | Contact Us | Help

CSIRO

© CSIRO 1996-2012