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Showing papers by "William T. Reach published in 1997"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors presented the mean 3.5-240 μm spectrum of high-latitude dust, obtained by the DIRBE instrument on the COBE spacecraft, and showed that at wavelengths shorter than 60 μm the spectrum shows an excess of emission over that expected from very small dust particles undergoing temperature fluctuations.
Abstract: Using data obtained by the DIRBE instrument on the COBE spacecraft, we present the mean 3.5-240 μm spectrum of high-latitude dust. Combined with a spectrum obtained by the FIRAS instrument, these data represent the most comprehensive wavelength coverage of dust in the diffuse interstellar medium, spanning the 3.5-1000 μm wavelength regime. At wavelengths shorter than ~60 μm the spectrum shows an excess of emission over that expected from dust heated by the local interstellar radiation field and radiating at an equilibrium temperature. The DIRBE data thus extend the observations of this excess, first detected by the IRAS satellite at 25 and 12 μm, to shorter wavelengths. The excess emission arises from very small dust particles undergoing temperature fluctuations. However, the 3.5-4.9 μm intensity ratio cannot be reproduced by very small silicate or graphite grains. The DIRBE data strongly suggest that the 3.5-12 μm emission is produced by carriers of the ubiquitous 3.3, 6.2, 7.7, 8.6, and 11.3 μm solid state emission features that have been detected in a wide variety of astrophysical objects. The carriers of these features have been widely identified with polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs). Our dust model consists of a mixture of PAH molecules and bare astronomical silicate and graphite grains with optical properties given by Draine & Lee. We obtain a very good fit to the DIRBE spectrum, deriving the size distribution, abundances relative to the total hydrogen column density, and relative contribution of each dust component to the observed IR emission. At wavelengths above 140 μm the model is dominated by emission from T ≈ 17-20 K graphite and 15-18 K silicate grains. The model provides a good fit to the FIRAS spectrum in the 140-500 μm wavelength regime but leaves an excess Galactic emission component at 500-1000 μm. The nature of this component is still unresolved. We find that (C/H) is equal to (7.3 ± 2.2) × 10-5 for PAHs and equal to (2.5 ± 0.8) × 10-4 for graphite grains, requiring about 20% of the cosmic abundance of carbon to be locked up in PAHs, and about 70% in graphite grains [we adopt (C/H)☉ = 3.6 × 10-4]. The model also requires all of the available magnesium, silicon, and iron to be locked up in silicates. The power emitted by PAHs is 1.6 × 10-31 W per H atom, by graphite grains 3.0 × 10-31 W per H atom, and by silicates 1.4 × 10-31 W per H atom, adding up to a total infrared intensity of 6.0 × 10-31 W per H atom, or ~2 L☉ M. The [C II] 158 μm line emission detected by the FIRAS provides important information on the gas phase abundance of carbon in the diffuse ISM. The 158 μm line arises predominantly from the cold neutral medium (CNM) and shows that for typical CNM densities and temperatures C+/H = (0.5-1.0) × 10-4, which is ~14%-28% of the cosmic carbon abundance. The remaining carbon abundance in the CNM, which must be locked up in dust, is about equal to that required to provide the observed IR emission, consistent with notion that most (75%) of this emission arises from the neutral component of the diffuse ISM. The model provides a good fit to the general interstellar extinction curve. However, at UV wavelengths it predicts a larger extinction. The excess extinction may be the result of the UV properties adopted for the PAHs. If real, the excess UV extinction may be accounted for by changes in the relative abundances of PAHs and carriers of the 2200 A extinction bump.

247 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
01 Jun 1997-Icarus
TL;DR: In this article, the surface brightness Fourier-filtering was used to suppress the smallest (15°) variation in the infrared sky brightness of the Earth in the ecliptic plane.

81 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
01 May 1997-Icarus
TL;DR: In this article, the results of two scans through the dust trail of Comet P/Kopff made with ISOCAM on 26 March 1996 were presented, at mean anomalies of 0.5° and 1° less than the nucleus were imaged using the IRAS Band 1, 12 μm filter.

19 citations



Journal ArticleDOI
01 Jan 1997
TL;DR: In this article, the spectrum of local clouds has been measured using ISO and COBE, confirming in general the models of excitation and cooling of dust illuminated by the the interstellar radiation field.
Abstract: In this contribution, we discuss some topics in the study of dust in the local interstellar medium. The spectrum of local clouds has recently been measured using ISO and COBE , confirming in general the models of excitation and cooling of dust illuminated by the the interstellar radiation field. We discuss in some detail the spatial correlation of interstellar dust and gas and the idea that infrared emission traces the total column density of the interstellar medium, with the particular application to the formation of H2. We also show that dust is present in the nearby Loop I shell, with properties similar to average, suggesting that the walls of the Local Bubble would also have relatively ‘normal’ dust content.

3 citations




Book ChapterDOI
01 Jan 1997
TL;DR: In this article, the authors used the Leiden/Dwingeloo HI survey to study the froth structure of the interstellar medium and observed that a significant fraction of intermediate latitude cirrus are distant clouds and that some cirrus extend far above (or below) the Galactic plane (1 kpc).
Abstract: Galactic filaments called cirrus are used here to study the froth structure of the interstellar medium. Using the Leiden/Dwingeloo HI survey we observe that a significant fraction of intermediate latitude cirrus are distant clouds (R Gal <6 kpc) and that some cirrus extend far above (or below) the Galactic plane (1 kpc). Among them, a supershell centered at l=15°, b=−12° is studied.