The Thermal Pressure of the Interstellar Medium Derived from Cloud Shadows in the Extreme Ultraviolet
- 1 January 1997
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in International Astronomical Union Colloquium
- Vol. 166, 61-64
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s025292110007072x
Abstract
We have used the Deep Survey telescope of EUVE to investigate shadows in the diffuse EUV/Soft X-ray background cast by clouds in the interstellar medium. We confirm the existence of a shadow previously reported, and provide evidence for two new shadows. We used IRAS data to identify the clouds producing these shadows and to determine their optical depth to EUV radiation. The EUV-absorbing clouds are optically thick in the EUV, and all EUV emission detected in the direction of these shadows must be produced from material in front of the clouds. We obtained new optical data to determine the distance to these clouds. We use a new differential cloud technique to obtain the pressure of the interstellar medium. These results do not depend on any zero level calibration of the data. Our results provide evidence that the pressure of the hot interstellar gas is the same in three different directions in the local interstellar medium, and is at least 8 times higher than derived for the local cloud surrounding our Sun. This provides new evidence for large thermal pressure imbalances in the local ISM, and directly contradicts the basic assumption of thermal pressure equilibrium used in almost all present models of the interstellar medium.Keywords
This publication has 5 references indexed in Scilit:
- Observations of the local interstellar medium with the Extreme Ultraviolet ExplorerSpace Science Reviews, 1996
- Characteristics of nearby interstellar matterSpace Science Reviews, 1995
- Evidence for a large thermal pressure imbalance in the local interstellar mediumNature, 1995
- Delayed recombination as a major source of the soft X-ray backgroundNature, 1994
- A theory of the interstellar medium - Three components regulated by supernova explosions in an inhomogeneous substrateThe Astrophysical Journal, 1977