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ABSTRACT We combine parallax distances to nearby O stars with parsec-scale resolution three-dimensional dust maps of the local region of the Milky Way (within 1.25 kpc of the Sun) to simulate the transfer of Lyman continuum photons through the interstellar medium (ISM). Assuming a fixed gas-to-dust ratio, we determine the density of ionized gas, electron temperature, and H$$\alpha$$ emissivity throughout the local Milky Way. There is good morphological agreement between the predicted and observed H$$\alpha$$ all-sky map of the Wisconsin H$$\alpha$$ Mapper. We find that our simulation underproduces the observed H$$\alpha$$ emission while overestimating the sizes of H ii regions, and we discuss ways in which agreement between simulations and observations may be improved. Of the total ionizing luminosity of $$5.84 \times 10^{50}~{\rm photons \, s^{-1}}$$, 15 per cent is absorbed by dust, 64 per cent ionizes ‘classical’ H ii regions, 11 per cent ionizes the diffuse warm ionized medium, and 10 per cent escapes the simulation volume. We find that 18 per cent of the high-altitude ($$|b| > 30{}^{\circ }$$) H$$\alpha$$ arises from dust scattered rather than direct emission. These initial results provide an impressive validation of the three-dimensional dust maps and O-star parallaxes, opening a new frontier for studying the ionized ISM’s structure and energetics in three dimensions.more » « lessFree, publicly-accessible full text available March 26, 2026
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Abstract The Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC) has an extensive Hαemission halo that traces an extended, warm ionized component of its interstellar medium. Using the Wisconsin HαMapper telescope, we present the first kinematic Hαsurvey of an extensive region around the LMC, from (ℓ,b) = (264.°5, − 45.°5) to (295.°5, − 19.°5), covering +150 ≤vLSR≤ + 390 km s−1. We find that ionized hydrogen exists throughout the galaxy and extends several degrees beyond detected neutral hydrogen emission as traced by 21 cm in current surveys. Using the column density structure of the neutral gas and stellar line-of-sight depths as a guide, we estimate the upper limit mass of the ionized component of the LMC to be roughlyMionized≈ (0.6–1.8) × 109M☉, which is comparable to the total neutral atomic gas mass in the same region (Mneutral≈ 0.76–0.85 × 109M☉). Considering only the atomic phases, we findMionized/Mionized+neutral, to be 46%–68% throughout the LMC and its extended halo. Additionally, we find an ionized gas cloud that extends off of the LMC at (ℓ,b) ≈ (285°, − 28°) into a region previously identified as the Leading Arm complex. This gas is moving at a similar line-of-sight velocity as the LMC and hasMionized/Mionized+neutral= 13%–51%. This study, combined with previous studies of the SMC and extended structures of the Magellanic Clouds, continues to suggest that warm, ionized gas is as massive and dynamically important as the neutral gas in the Magellanic System.more » « less
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