Anomalous Neutral Hydrogen Column Densities in Local Interstellar Medium Clouds

Analysis of high-resolution spectra of the hydrogen and deuterium Ly α lines provides measurements of interstellar neutral hydrogen column densities N (H i ) to 113 stars within 50 pc of the Sun. Plots of N (H i ) versus distance through the LIC, G, Mic, and other clouds in the local interstellar me...

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Published in:The Astrophysical Journal
Main Authors: Jeffrey L. Linsky, Seth Redfield
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: IOP Publishing 2025-01-01
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/ada89e
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author Jeffrey L. Linsky
Seth Redfield
author_facet Jeffrey L. Linsky
Seth Redfield
author_sort Jeffrey L. Linsky
collection DOAJ
container_title The Astrophysical Journal
description Analysis of high-resolution spectra of the hydrogen and deuterium Ly α lines provides measurements of interstellar neutral hydrogen column densities N (H i ) to 113 stars within 50 pc of the Sun. Plots of N (H i ) versus distance through the LIC, G, Mic, and other clouds in the local interstellar medium (LISM) show very interesting properties. For the LIC and G clouds, nearly all of the observed neutral hydrogen occurs within 3 or 4 pc of the Sun with no significant additional neutral hydrogen at larger distances out to 50 pc, except for several sight lines with anomalously high N (H i ). Scatter about the mean hydrogen column density in the LIC is several times larger than the measurement errors. We evaluate several possible sources of the high N (H i ) sight lines. Seven sight lines with anomalously high N (H i ) are aligned perpendicular to the line connecting the centers of the LIC and G clouds where the two clouds merge creating a mixed cloud region. The high N (H i ) in these seven sight lines can be explained by their paths through an irregularly shaped mixed cloud region where the neutral hydrogen number density is the sum for both clouds. However, the most recent nearby supernova explosion created a shell that is seen in nearly the same direction perpendicular to the LIC/G axis and may also explain these seven high N (H i ) sight lines. Other possible explanations for the high N (H i ) sight lines include interstellar shocks, wakes produced by stars moving rapidly through the LISM, and regions where other clouds may overlap.
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spelling doaj-art-bef4e2df00f3428588a90e192eeade502025-08-20T00:44:30ZengIOP PublishingThe Astrophysical Journal1538-43572025-01-01980220210.3847/1538-4357/ada89eAnomalous Neutral Hydrogen Column Densities in Local Interstellar Medium CloudsJeffrey L. Linsky0https://orcid.org/0000-0003-4446-3181Seth Redfield1https://orcid.org/0000-0003-3786-3486JILA, University of Colorado and NIST , Boulder, CO 80309-0440, USA ; jlinsky@jila.colorado.eduAstronomy Department and Van Vleck Observatory, Wesleyan University , Middletown, CT 06459-0123, USAAnalysis of high-resolution spectra of the hydrogen and deuterium Ly α lines provides measurements of interstellar neutral hydrogen column densities N (H i ) to 113 stars within 50 pc of the Sun. Plots of N (H i ) versus distance through the LIC, G, Mic, and other clouds in the local interstellar medium (LISM) show very interesting properties. For the LIC and G clouds, nearly all of the observed neutral hydrogen occurs within 3 or 4 pc of the Sun with no significant additional neutral hydrogen at larger distances out to 50 pc, except for several sight lines with anomalously high N (H i ). Scatter about the mean hydrogen column density in the LIC is several times larger than the measurement errors. We evaluate several possible sources of the high N (H i ) sight lines. Seven sight lines with anomalously high N (H i ) are aligned perpendicular to the line connecting the centers of the LIC and G clouds where the two clouds merge creating a mixed cloud region. The high N (H i ) in these seven sight lines can be explained by their paths through an irregularly shaped mixed cloud region where the neutral hydrogen number density is the sum for both clouds. However, the most recent nearby supernova explosion created a shell that is seen in nearly the same direction perpendicular to the LIC/G axis and may also explain these seven high N (H i ) sight lines. Other possible explanations for the high N (H i ) sight lines include interstellar shocks, wakes produced by stars moving rapidly through the LISM, and regions where other clouds may overlap.https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/ada89eStellar-interstellar interactionsInterstellar cloudsInterstellar medium windHeliosphereWarm neutral mediumUltraviolet sources
spellingShingle Jeffrey L. Linsky
Seth Redfield
Anomalous Neutral Hydrogen Column Densities in Local Interstellar Medium Clouds
Stellar-interstellar interactions
Interstellar clouds
Interstellar medium wind
Heliosphere
Warm neutral medium
Ultraviolet sources
title Anomalous Neutral Hydrogen Column Densities in Local Interstellar Medium Clouds
title_full Anomalous Neutral Hydrogen Column Densities in Local Interstellar Medium Clouds
title_fullStr Anomalous Neutral Hydrogen Column Densities in Local Interstellar Medium Clouds
title_full_unstemmed Anomalous Neutral Hydrogen Column Densities in Local Interstellar Medium Clouds
title_short Anomalous Neutral Hydrogen Column Densities in Local Interstellar Medium Clouds
title_sort anomalous neutral hydrogen column densities in local interstellar medium clouds
topic Stellar-interstellar interactions
Interstellar clouds
Interstellar medium wind
Heliosphere
Warm neutral medium
Ultraviolet sources
url https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/ada89e
work_keys_str_mv AT jeffreyllinsky anomalousneutralhydrogencolumndensitiesinlocalinterstellarmediumclouds
AT sethredfield anomalousneutralhydrogencolumndensitiesinlocalinterstellarmediumclouds