The Cold Gaseous Halo of NGC 891

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Published 2007 July 11 © 2007. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved. Printed in U.S.A.
, , Citation Tom Oosterloo et al 2007 AJ 134 1019 DOI 10.1086/520332

1538-3881/134/3/1019

Abstract

We present H I observations of the edge-on galaxy NGC 891. These are among the deepest ever performed on an external galaxy. They reveal a huge gaseous halo, much more extended than seen previously and containing almost 30% of the H I. This H I halo shows structures on various scales. On one side, there is a filament extending (in projection) up to 22 kpc vertically from the disk. Small (M ≳ 106 M) halo clouds, some with forbidden (apparently counterrotating) velocities, are also detected. The overall kinematics of the halo gas is characterized by differential rotation lagging with respect to that of the disk. The lag, more pronounced at small radii, increases with height from the plane. There is evidence that a significant fraction of the halo is due to a galactic fountain. Accretion from intergalactic space may also play a role in building up the halo and providing the low angular momentum material needed to account for the observed rotation lag. The long H I filament and the counterrotating clouds may be direct evidence of such accretion.

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10.1086/520332