The 21-SPONGE HI Absorption Line Survey II: The temperature of Galactic HI

Abstract

We present 21-cm Spectral Line Observations of Neutral Gas with the VLA (21-SPONGE), a Karl G. Jansky Very Large Array (VLA) large project (~600 hours) for measuring the physical properties of Galactic neutral hydrogen (HI). 21-SPONGE is distinguished among previous Galactic HI studies as a result of: (1) exceptional optical depth sensitivity (στ < 10-3 per 0.42\,km\,s-1 channels over 57 lines of sight); (2) matching 21 cm emission spectra with highest-possible angular resolution (~4') from the Arecibo Observatory; (3) detailed comparisons with numerical simulations for assessing observational biases. We autonomously decompose 21 cm spectra and derive the physical properties (i.e., spin temperature, Ts, column density) of the cold neutral medium (CNM; Ts<250\,K), thermally unstable medium (UNM; 250< Ts < 1000\,K) and warm neutral medium (WNM; Ts > 1000\,K) simultaneously. We detect 50% of the total HI mass in absorption, the majority of which is CNM (56 +/- 10%, corresponding to 28% of the total HI mass). Although CNM is detected ubiquitously, the CNM fraction along most lines of sight is <50%. We find that 20% of the total HI mass is thermally unstable (41 +/- 10% of HI detected in absorption), with no significant variation with Galactic environment. Finally, although the WNM comprises 52% of the total HI mass, we detect little evidence for WNM absorption with 1000<Ts<4000\,K. Following spectral modeling, we detect a stacked residual absorption feature corresponding to WNM with Ts104\,K. We conclude that excitation in excess of collisions likely produces significantly higher WNM Ts than predicted by steady-state models.

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