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Using Milky Way data of the new Effelsberg-Bonn HI Survey (EBHIS) and the Galactic All-Sky Survey (GASS), we present a revised picture of the high-velocity cloud (HVC) complex Galactic center negative (GCN). Owing to the higher angular resolution of these surveys compared to previous studies (e.g., the Leiden Dwingeloo Survey), we resolve complex GCN into lots of individual tiny clumps, that mostly have relatively broad line widths of more than 15 km s(-1). We do not detect a diffuse extended counterpart, which is unusual for an HVC complex. In total 243 clumps were identified and parameterized which allows us to statistically analyze the data. Cold-line components (i.e.,Delta upsilon(fwhm) < 7.5 km s(-1)) are found in about 5% only of the identified cloudlets. Our analysis reveals that complex GCN is likely built up of several subpopulations that do not share a common origin. Furthermore, complex GCN might be a prime example for warm-gas accretion onto the Milky Way, where neutral HI clouds are not stable against interaction with the Milky Way gas halo and become ionized prior to accretion.
Cold gas accretion by high-velocity clouds and their connection to QSO Absorption-line systems
(2012)
We combine H I 21 cm observations of the Milky Way, M31, and the local galaxy population with QSO absorption-line measurements to geometrically model the three-dimensional distribution of infalling neutral-gas clouds ("high-velocity clouds" (HVCs)) in the extended halos of low-redshift galaxies. We demonstrate that the observed distribution of HVCs around the Milky Way and M31 can be modeled by a radial exponential decline of the mean H I volume-filling factor in their halos. Our model suggests a characteristic radial extent of HVCs of R-halo similar to 50 kpc, a total H I mass in HVCs of similar to 10(8) M-circle dot, and a neutral-gas accretion rate of similar to 0.7 M-circle dot yr(-1) for M31/Milky-Way-type galaxies. Using a Holmberg-like luminosity scaling of the halo size of galaxies we estimate R-halo similar to 110 kpc for the most massive galaxies. The total absorption cross-section of HVCs at z approximate to 0 most likely is dominated by galaxies with total H I masses between 10(8.5) and 10(10) M-circle dot. Our model indicates that the H I disks of galaxies and their surrounding HVC population can account for 30%-100% of intervening QSO absorption-line systems with log N(H I) >= 17.5 at z approximate to 0. We estimate that the neutral-gas accretion rate density of galaxies at low redshift from infalling HVCs is dM(H) (I)/dt/dV approximate to 0.022 M-circle dot yr(-1) Mpc(-3), which is close to the measured star formation rate density in the local universe. HVCs thus may play an important role in the ongoing formation and evolution of galaxies.