Abstract

Dark gas in the interstellar medium (ISM) is believed to not be detectable either in CO or Hi radio emission, but it is detected by other means including gamma-rays, dust emission and extinction traced outside the Galactic plane at |b|>5 degree. In these analyses, the 21-cm HI emission is usually assumed to be completely optically thin. We have reanalyzed the HI emission from the whole sky at |b|>15 degree by considering temperature stratification in the ISM inferred from the Planck/IRAS analysis of the dust properties. The results indicate that the HI emission is saturated with an optical depth ranging from 0.5 to 3 for 85% of the local HI gas. This optically thick HI is characterized by spin temperature in the range 10K-60K, significantly lower than previously postulated in the literature, whereas such low temperature is consistent with emission/absorption measurements of the cool HI toward radio continuum sources. The distribution and the column density of the HI are consistent with those of the dark gas sug- gested by gamma-rays, and it is possible that the dark gas in the Galaxy is dominated by optically thick cold HI gas. This result implies that the average density of HI is 2-2.5 times higher than that derived on the optically-thin assumption in the local ISM.

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