Abstract

Abstract We compose a 265-sight-line Milky Way C iv line-shape sample using the Hubble Space Telescope/Cosmic Origins Spectrograph archive, which is complementary to the existing Si iv samples. C iv has a higher ionization potential (47–64 eV) than Si iv (33–45 eV), so it also traces warm gas, which is roughly cospatial with Si iv. The spatial density distribution and kinematics of C iv are identical to those Si iv within ≈2σ. C iv is more sensitive to the warm gas density distribution at large radii with a higher element abundance. Applying the kinematical model to the C iv sample, we find two possible solutions of the density distribution, which are distinguished by the relative extension along the disk midplane and the normal-line direction. Both solutions can reproduce the existing sample and suggest a warm gas disk mass of log M ( M ⊙ ) ≈ 8 and an upper limit of log M ( M ⊙ ) < 9.3 within 250 kpc, which is consistent with Si iv. There is a decrease in the C iv/Si iv column density ratio from the Galactic center to the outskirts by 0.2–0.3 dex, which may suggest a phase transition or different ionization mechanisms for C iv and Si iv. Also, we find that the difference between C iv and Si iv is an excellent tracer of small-scale features, and we find a typical size of 5°–10° for possible turbulence within individual clouds (≈1 kpc).

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call