Vertical scaleheights in a gravitationally coupled, three-component Galactic disk
The vertical scaleheight of the atomic hydrogen gas shows a remarkably flat distribution with the galactocentric radius in the inner Galaxy. This has been a long-standing puzzle (Oort 1962) because the gas scaleheight should increase with radius when treated as responding to the gravitational potent...
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description | The vertical scaleheight of the atomic hydrogen gas shows a remarkably flat distribution with the galactocentric radius in the inner Galaxy. This has been a long-standing puzzle (Oort 1962) because the gas scaleheight should increase with radius when treated as responding to the gravitational potential of the exponential stellar disk. We argue that the gravitational force of the molecular and atomic hydrogen gas should also be brought into the picture to explain this. We treat the stars, the HI and H_2 gas as three gravitationally coupled components in the Galactic disk, and find the response of each component to the joint potential and thus obtain their vertical distribution in a self-consistent fashion. The effect of the joint potential is different for the three components because of their different velocity dispersions. We show that this approach cohesively and naturally explains the observed scaleheight distribution of all the three components, namely, the HI and H_2 gas and the stars, in the region studied (2-12 kpc). This includes the constant scaleheight for the HI seen in the inner Galaxy. The effect of H_2 dominates in the molecular ring region of 4-8.5 kpc, while that due to HI is dominant in the outer Galaxy. |
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This has been a long-standing puzzle (Oort 1962) because the gas scaleheight should increase with radius when treated as responding to the gravitational potential of the exponential stellar disk. We argue that the gravitational force of the molecular and atomic hydrogen gas should also be brought into the picture to explain this. We treat the stars, the HI and H_2 gas as three gravitationally coupled components in the Galactic disk, and find the response of each component to the joint potential and thus obtain their vertical distribution in a self-consistent fashion. The effect of the joint potential is different for the three components because of their different velocity dispersions. We show that this approach cohesively and naturally explains the observed scaleheight distribution of all the three components, namely, the HI and H_2 gas and the stars, in the region studied (2-12 kpc). This includes the constant scaleheight for the HI seen in the inner Galaxy. The effect of H_2 dominates in the molecular ring region of 4-8.5 kpc, while that due to HI is dominant in the outer Galaxy.</description><identifier>EISSN: 2331-8422</identifier><identifier>DOI: 10.48550/arxiv.0210239</identifier><language>eng</language><publisher>Ithaca: Cornell University Library, arXiv.org</publisher><subject>Atomic radius ; Coupling (molecular) ; Galactic disk ; Galaxies ; Galaxy distribution ; Gravitation ; Vertical distribution</subject><ispartof>arXiv.org, 2002-10</ispartof><rights>2002. This work is published under https://arxiv.org/licenses/assumed-1991-2003/license.html (the “License”). 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We argue that the gravitational force of the molecular and atomic hydrogen gas should also be brought into the picture to explain this. We treat the stars, the HI and H_2 gas as three gravitationally coupled components in the Galactic disk, and find the response of each component to the joint potential and thus obtain their vertical distribution in a self-consistent fashion. The effect of the joint potential is different for the three components because of their different velocity dispersions. We show that this approach cohesively and naturally explains the observed scaleheight distribution of all the three components, namely, the HI and H_2 gas and the stars, in the region studied (2-12 kpc). This includes the constant scaleheight for the HI seen in the inner Galaxy. 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subjects | Atomic radius Coupling (molecular) Galactic disk Galaxies Galaxy distribution Gravitation Vertical distribution |
title | Vertical scaleheights in a gravitationally coupled, three-component Galactic disk |
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