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Distribution of the ISM

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Measurement of halo HI done by comparing Lya absorption against high-Z stars to ... Primordial extragalactic gas, halo supernovae, galactic fountain ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Distribution of the ISM


1
Distribution of the ISM
  • 3 February 2003
  • Astronomy G9001 - Spring 2003
  • Prof. Mordecai-Mark Mac Low

2
The Interstellar Medium
  • Constituents
  • Gas modern ISM has 90 H, 10 He by number
  • Dust refractory metals
  • Cosmic Rays relativistic e-, protons, heavy
    nuclei
  • Magnetic Fields interact with CR, ionized gas
  • Mass
  • Milky Way has 10 of baryons in gas
  • Low surface brightness galaxies can have 90

3
Vertical Distribution
  • Cold molecular gas has 100 pc scale height
  • HI has composite distribution-Lockman layer
  • Reynolds layer of diffuse ionized gas
  • Hot halo extending into local IGM
  • High ions
  • Edge-on galaxies FIR vs Ha relation

4
Molecular Hydrogen
  • Molecular gas very inhomogeneous
  • Azimuthal average shows (Clemens et al. 1988)
  • Layer thickens consistent with confinement by
    stellar gravitational field, constant velocity
    dispersion.

5
CO distribution in Galaxy
Dame, Hartmann, Thaddeus 2001
6
Vertical distribution of HI
  • Measurement of halo HI done by comparing Lya
    absorption against high-Z stars to 21 cm emission
    (Lockman, Hobbs, Shull 1986)
  • Need to watch for stellar contamination, radio
    beam sidelobes, varying spin temperatures.

21 cm emission
Lya abs.
7
N21/Na
Lockman, Hobbs, Shull 1986
8
Vertical Structure of HI
  • Overall density distribution (Dickey Lockman
    1990) at radii 4-8 kpc
  • Lockman layer
  • Disk flares substantially beyond solar circle.

9
Local vertical structure
  • The sky is falling!
  • Most neutral material above below plane of disk
    infalling.
  • Material with v gt 90 km/s called high velocity
    clouds (HVC), slower gas called intermediate
    velocity clouds (IVC)
  • HVC origins
  • Primordial gas (only Type II SN enrichment)
  • Magellanic stream material (Z0.1Z?)
  • IVC origin
  • Galactic fountain hot gas rises, cools, falls
    (ZZ?)

10
Distribution of HVCs
Wakker et al. 2002 (astro-ph/0208009)
11
Halo structure
  • Observations at Galactic tangent point with Green
    Bank Telescope reveal clumpy, core-halo
    structure.
  • Distant analogs of intermediate-velocity clouds?

Lockman 2002
12
Warm ionized gas in halo
  • Diffuse warm ionized gas extends to higher than 1
    kpc, seen in Ha (Reynolds 1985)
  • Reynolds layer, Warm Ionized Medium, or Diffuse
    Ionized Gas
  • Dispersion measures and distances of pulsars in
    globular clusters show scale height of 1.5 kpc
    (Reynolds 1989). Revision using all pulsars by
    Taylor Cordes (1993), Cordes Lazio (2002
    astro-ph)

13
(No Transcript)
14
Ionization Ratios
  • Clues to ionization of DIG
  • 15 of OB ionizing photons sufficient
  • Ratios of SII/Ha, NII/Ha enhanced at high
    altitude compared to HII regions
  • dilution of photoionization (Domgörgen Mathis
    1994) part of the answer
  • additional heating must be present
  • shocks
  • turbulent mixing layers in bubbles (Slavin, Shull
    Begelman 1993)
  • galactic fountain clouds?

15
Hot gas in halo
  • FUSE observations of extragalactic objects show
    OVI absorption lines from halo (Wakker et al.
    2003, Savage et al. 2003, Sembach et al. 2003).
  • Primordial extragalactic gas, halo supernovae,
    galactic fountain
  • High ions (CIV, NV, OVI) show 2-5 kpc scale
    heights in a very patchy distribution (Savage et
    al 2003)

16
NGC 891
Howk Savage 1997, 2000
  • HII

Unsharp masked
dust
17
Correlation between DIG and SF
Rand, 1996
18
Galactic Fountain
  • Originally referred to buoyant flow of hot gas
    out of disk followed by radiative cooling
    (Shapiro Field 1976)
  • Now refers to any model of flow of hot gas from
    the plane into the halo, followed by cooling and
    fall in the form of cold clouds.
  • Computations of cooling of 106 K gas in
    hydrostatic equilibrium reproduce high ions

19
Typical Values for Cold/Warm
Boulares Cox 1990
20
Interstellar Pressure
  • Thermal pressures are very low, P 103k 1.4 x
    10-13 erg cm-3. Perhaps reaches 3000k in plane.
  • Magnetic pressures with B3-6µG reach 0.4-1.4 x
    10-12 erg cm-3.
  • CR pressures 0.8-1.6 x 10-12 erg cm-3.
  • Turbulent motions of up to 20 km/s contribute as
    well 10-12 erg cm-3.
  • Boulares Cox (1990) show that total weight may
    require as much as 5 x 10-12 erg cm-3 to
    support.

21
Vertical Support
  • Thermal pressure of gas insufficient to support
    in hydrostatic equilibrium with observed scale
    heights
  • Boulares Cox (1990) suggest that magnetic
    tension could support gas--a suspension bridge
  • Alternatively, cool gas may not be in static
    equilibrium, but dynamically flowing? (eg Avillez
    2000) Remains to be shown.

22
Discussion
  • Ferrière, 2002, Rev Mod Phys, 73, 1031-1066
  • First exercise problems, results

23
Numerical topics
  • Shocks (analytic)
  • Upwind differencing
  • Consistent advection
  • Artificial viscosity
  • Second order schemes
  • Moving grid
  • 2D vs 3D (face-centered vs edge-centered)

24
Shocks
v2
v1
  • Discontinuities in flow equations across
    (stationary) shock front
  • Conservation laws still hold

25
Jump Conditions
  • If the Mach number is large, the density jump
    conditions reduce to
  • The velocity difference across the shock
  • Pressure ratio P2/P1 -gt2?M12/(?1)

26
Numerical Viscosity
  • Suppose we take the Lax scheme
  • and rewrite it in the form of FTCS remainder
  • This is just the finite difference representation
    of a
  • diffusion term like a
    viscosity.

27
Upwind Differencing
  • Centered differencing takes information from
    regions flow hasnt reached yet.
  • Upwind differencing more stable when supersonic
    (Godunov 1959)
  • First order donor cell method

velocity
28
Conservative formulation
  • to ensure conservation, take differential hydro
    equations, such as mass equation
  • Integrate hydro equations over each zone volume
    V, with surface S, using divergence theorem
  • Similarly for momentum and energy

29
Order of Interpolation
  • How to interpolate from cell centers to cell
    edges?
  • First order, donor cell
  • Second order, piecewise linear
  • Third order, piecewise parabolic (PPA)

30
Monotonicity
  • Enforcing monotonic slopes improves numerical
    stability.
  • Van Leer (1977) second-order scheme does this
  • Take w to be normalized distance from zone
    center -1/2 lt w lt 1/2
  • ?i(w) ?iwd?i. How to choose d?i?

31
Artificial Viscosity
  • How to spread out a shock enough to prevent
    numerical instability?
  • Von Neumann Richtmeyer (1950)
  • Similarly for energy. Satisfies conservation
    laws
  • However, cannot resolve multiple shocks wall
    heating

32
Use of IDL
pause
  • Quick and dirty movies
  • for i1,30 do begin
  • asin(findgen(10000.))
  • hdfrd,fzhd_string(i,form(i3.3))aa,dd,
    xx
  • plot,x,d4.dat end
  • Scaling, autoscaling, logscaling 2D arrays
  • tvscl,alog(d)
  • tv,bytscl(d,maxdmax,mindmin)
  • Array manipulation, resizing
  • tvscl,rebin(d,nx,ny,/s) nx, ny multiple
  • tvscl,rebin(reform(dj,,),nx,ny,/s)

33
More IDL
  • plots, contours
  • plot,x,di,,k,xtitleTitle,psym-3
  • oplot,x,di10,,k
  • contour,reform(di,,),nlev10
  • slicer3D
  • dp ptr_new(alog10(d))
  • slicer3D,dp
  • Subroutines, functions

34
Assignments
  • For next class read for discussion
  • Heiles, 1990, ApJ, 354, 483-491
  • Finish reading
  • Stone Norman, 1992, ApJ Supp, 80, 753-790
  • Complete Exercise 2
  • Modification of ZEUS
  • properties of 1D shocks and waves
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