Abstract

Until recently, high angular resolution and high sensitivity surveys of the radio emission from the plane of our Galaxy were available only at frequencies of several GHz, where large single dish radio telescopes provide arcminute scale angular resolution. At these frequencies thermal radiation from HII regions and diffuse ionized gas comprise a major component of the Galactic emission. Advances in wide field interferometric imaging techniques now make it possible to carry out high sensitivity surveys of the Galaxy with arcminute scale angular resolution at 1.4 GHz and below. Over the past few years initial synthesis surveys have been made. More ambitious surveys that combined sensitive continuum observations with full polarimetry and images of the 3-dimensional structure of atomic hydrogen gas at pc scales are currently underway in the northern (DRAO) and southern (ATNF) hemispheres. The interstellar medium of the Galaxy contains structure on all spatial scales, and these surveys combined data from aperture synthesis telescopes and signal dish antennas to provide full spatial frequency coverage to the resolution limit. Preliminary results reveal wide-spread features and processes in the the interstellar medium that are not readily visible by other means, including, for example, unusual atomic hydrogen structures related to the vertical transfer of matter and radiation between the disk and halo of the Galaxy, Faraday rotation structures that allow study of the magnetic field and diffuse ionized component in the plane of the Galaxy, and a cold atomic phase of the neutral medium that may provide a link between global shock phenomena in the galaxy and the formation of molecular clouds.

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