The Wisconsin H-Alpha Mapper Sky Survey: A First Look At the Global Distribution of Diffuse Ionized Gas in the Milky Way

Nitish Chopra, L. M. Haffner, R. J. Reynolds, G. J. Madsen, A. S. Hill, K. A. Barger, K. P. Jaehnig, E. J. Mierkiewicz, J. W. Percival, N. M. Pingel, D. T. Reese, M. C. Gostisha, Lawrence Haffner

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

After a year of observations from its new location on Cerro Tololo, the Wisconsin Hα Mapper (WHAM) has nearly completed survey observations below δ < -30°. This new data combined with the Northern Sky Survey provides the first kinematic, all-sky survey of diffuse Hα from the Milky Way. Aside from many large-scale, locally-ionized regions, much of this emission arises from the Warm Ionized Medium (WIM), a diffuse but thick component of the ISM that extends several kiloparsecs into the Galactic halo. WHAM was designed primarily to study the WIM, delivering a spatially integrated spectrum from a one-degree beam on the sky covering 200 km s-1 with 12 km s-1 spectral resolution. The short exposures of the survey reach sensitivity levels of about 0.1 R (EM 0.2 pc cm-6) and reveal emission toward nearly every direction in the sky. Here, we present our early efforts at reducing this new southern dataset and offer a first look at the global distribution and kinematics of diffuse ionized gas throughout the Galaxy. WHAM and the research presented here are funded by NSF award AST-0607512. We also thank the excellent and responsive staff at CTIO in Chile for helping to keep our remote installation fully operational.
Original languageAmerican English
Journal217th American Astronomical Society Meeting
StatePublished - Jan 2011

Keywords

  • Interstellar medium
  • Milky Way

Disciplines

  • Astrophysics and Astronomy

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