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SPLASH: the Southern Parkes Large-Area Survey in Hydroxyl - data description and release

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posted on 2023-05-21, 08:25 authored by Dawson, JR, Jones, PA, Purcell, C, Walsh, AJ, Breen, SL, Brown, Courtney, Carretti, E, Cunningham, MR, John DickeyJohn Dickey, Simon EllingsenSimon Ellingsen, Gibson, SJ, Gomez, JF, Green, JA, Imai, H, Krishnan, V, Lo, N, Lowe, V, Marquarding, M, McClure-Griffiths, NM
We present the full data release for the Southern Parkes Large-Area Survey in Hydroxyl (SPLASH), a sensitive, unbiased single-dish survey of the Southern Galactic Plane in all four ground-state transitions of the OH radical at 1612, 1665, 1667, and 1720 MHz. The survey covers the inner Galactic Plane, Central Molecular Zone, and Galactic Centre over the range |b| < 2°, 332°< l < 10°, with a small extension between 2° < b < 6°, 358°< l < 4°. SPLASH is the most sensitive large-scale survey of OH to-date, reaching a characteristic root-mean-square sensitivity of ∼15 mK for an effective velocity resolution of ∼0.9 km s-1. The spectral line datacubes are optimized for the analysis of extended, quasi-thermal OH, but also contain numerous maser sources, which have been confirmed interferometrically and published elsewhere. We also present radio continuum images at 1612, 1666, and 1720 MHz. Based on initial comparisons with 12CO(J = 1–0), we find that OH rarely extends outside CO cloud boundaries in our data, but suggest that large variations in CO-to-OH brightness temperature ratios may reflect differences in the total gas column density traced by each. Column density estimation in the complex, continuum-bright Inner Galaxy is a challenge, and we demonstrate how failure to appropriately model sub-beam structure and the line-of-sight source distribution can lead to order-of-magnitude errors. Anomalous excitation of the 1612 and 1720 MHz satellite lines is ubiquitous in the inner Galaxy, but is disabled by line overlap in and around the Central Molecular Zone.

History

Publication title

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society

Volume

512

Pagination

3345-3364

ISSN

0035-8711

Department/School

School of Natural Sciences

Publisher

Blackwell Publishing Ltd

Place of publication

9600 Garsington Rd, Oxford, England, Oxon, Ox4 2Dg

Rights statement

This article has been accepted for publication in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society © 2022 The Author(s). Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Royal Astronomical Society. All rights reserved.

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  • Open

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Expanding knowledge in the physical sciences

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