The Diffuse Ionized Gas of the Large Magellanic Cloud [GA]

http://arxiv.org/abs/2305.09829


The Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC) has an extensive H${\alpha}$ emission halo that traces an extended, warm ionized component of its interstellar medium. Using the Wisconsin H${\alpha}$ Mapper (WHAM) telescope, we present the first kinematic \ha\ survey of an extensive region around the LMC, from $l,b = (264\deg .5,\,-45\deg .5)$ to $(295\deg .5,\,-19\deg .5)$, covering $+150\leq v_{lsr} \leq +390~ km s^{-1}$. We find that ionized hydrogen exists throughout the galaxy and extends several degrees beyond detected neutral hydrogen emission $(\log{\left(N_{\rm H_{~I}/\rm cm^{-2}}\right)\approx18.3})$ as traced by 21-cm in current surveys. Using the column density structure of the neutral gas and stellar line-of-sight depths as a guide, we estimate the upper limit mass of the ionized component of the LMC to be roughly $M_\mathrm{ionized}\approx (0.6-1.8)\times 10^{9}\,\mathrm{M}{sun}$, which is comparable to the total neutral atomic gas mass in the same region ($M\mathrm{neutral}\approx0.75-0.85\times10^{9}\,\mathrm{M}{sun}$). Considering only the atomic phases, we find $M\mathrm{ionized}/M_\mathrm{ionized+neutral}$, to be 46\%–68\% throughout the LMC and its extended halo. Additionally, we find an ionized gas cloud that extends off of the LMC at $l,b \approx (285\deg, -28\deg)$ into a region previously identified as the Leading Arm complex. This gas is moving at a similar line-of-sight velocity as the LMC and has $M_\mathrm{ionized}/M_\mathrm{ionized+neutral} =$ 13\%–51\%. This study, combined with previous studies of the SMC and extended structures of the Magellanic Clouds, continues to suggest that warm, ionized gas is as massive and dynamically-important as the neutral gas in the Magellanic System.$

Read this paper on arXiv…

B. Smart, L. Haffner, K. Barger, et. al.
Thu, 18 May 23
12/67

Comments: 20 pages, 12 figures, 4 tables