Unidentified infrared bands in the interstellar medium across the Galaxy
Lemke, D.; Lehtinen, K.; Mattila, K.; Leinert, C.; Kahanpää, J.
Finland, Germany
Abstract
We present a set of 6-12 mu m ISOPHOT-S spectra of the general interstellar medium of the Milky Way. This part of the spectrum is dominated by a series of strong, wide emission features commonly called the Unidentified Infrared Bands. The sampled area covers the inner Milky Way from l = -60 degr to +60 degr with a ten-degree step in longitude and nominal latitudes b = 0 degr, +/-1 degr. For each grid position the actual observed direction was selected from IRAS 100 mu m maps to minimize contamination by point sources and molecular clouds. All spectra were found to display the same spectral features. Band ratios are independent of band strength and Galactic coordinates. A comparison of total observed flux in band features and IRAS 100 mu m emission, a tracer for large interstellar dust grains, shows high correlation at large as well as small (1 arcmin) scales. This implies a strong connection between large dust grains and the elusive band carriers; the evolutionary history and heating energy source of these populations must be strongly linked. The average mid-infrared spectrum of the Milky Way is found to be similar to the average spectrum of spiral galaxy