Diffuse radiation in the Galaxy.
Abstract
Observations have been obtained to verify the existence of diffuse interstellar radiation. A Fabry photometer, attached to the 40-inch refractor at the Yerkes Observatory, was used to measure the brightness of regions over a wide range of galactic latitude. The intensities in the photographic region of the spectrum were calibrated by means of the Polar Sequence stars. The mean of four such runs across the Milky Way, on circles of nearly constant longitude, l = 40°, shows a maximum of brightness of 80 stars of the tenth magnitude per square degree for the diffuse extra-terrestrial radiation. The mean of three runs near l = 140° shows a maximum of 35 in the same units. It is shown that the observed intensity of diffuse light may be explained as scattered stellar radiation if the phase function governing the scattering of starlight by the interstellar matter is strongly forward-throwing. The concentration of the diffuse light toward the galactic circle is also in agreement with this property of the phase function. The observations also indicate that the scattering efficiency, or albedo, of the particles is greater than 0.3
- Publication:
-
The Astrophysical Journal
- Pub Date:
- January 1941
- DOI:
- 10.1086/144246
- Bibcode:
- 1941ApJ....93...70H