Deep Halpha imagery of the Eridanus shells
Abstract
A deep image of interlocking filamentary arcs of nebulosity has been obtained with a wide-field (≈ 30 diameter) narrow-band filter camera combined with a CCD as a detector. The resultant mosaic of images, extending to a galactic latitude of 65o, has been corrected for field distortions and had galactic coordinates superimposed on it to permit accurate correlations with the most recent H i (21 cm), X-ray (0.75 kev) and FIR (IRAS 100 μm) maps. Furthermore, an upper limit of 0.13 arcsec/yr to the expansion proper motion of the primary 25 long nebulous arc has been obtained by comparing a recent image obtained with the San Pedro Martir telescope of its filamentary edge with that on a POSS E plate obtained in 1951. It is concluded that these filamentary arcs are the superimposed images of separate shells (driven by supernova explosions and/or stellar winds) rather than the edges of a single `superbubble' stretching from Barnard's Arc (and the Orion Nebula) to these high galactic latitudes. The proper motion measurement argues against the primary emitting arc being associated with the giant radio loop (Loop 2) except in extraordinary circumstances.
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