Galactic Dust Reddening and Extinction Service

Gives the foreground (Milky Way) reddening for a line of sight, returning a reddening map, the corresponding 100 micron intensity, dust temperature, statistics, and Galactic extinctions using two methods.


All-sky view of the IRAS 100 micron imaging data, representing a MONTAGE-generated combination of the individual images created by Schlegel, Finkbeiner & Davis (1998). The Galactic Aitoff projection is shown in false color (blue is low intensity, red/white is high intensity).

Background

D.J. Schlegel, D.P. Finkbeiner, & M. Davis (1998, ApJ, 500, 525) combined the strengths of IRAS and COBE/DIRBE to create a relatively high resolution (~few arc-minute) 100-micron intensity map of the sky that is free of striping and accurately recalibrated to the absolute photometry of COBE/DIRBE. The maps can be used, in conjunction with a spectral template for the background, to derive the dust temperature & opacity, and hence, extinction, along the line of sight (assuming a standard extinction law). These Schlegel et al. maps have proven to be a popular product for astronomers, though users of this service should read the cautionary Notes below.

NOTE (July 2013): Schlafly and Finkbeiner (2011, ApJ 737, 103) provide new estimates of Galactic dust extinction from an analysis of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey. Their re-calibration is presented here alongside the Schlegel et al. results, though values rely on the Schlegel et al. E(B-V) maps as a starting point.

NOTE: This tool gives total extinction through the galaxy so is mostly for external galaxies. 3D maps of extinction within the Milky Way are an active area of research.

Technical Summary

The Technical Summary from the Schlegel et al web site is repeated here:

Cautionary Notes

Links

References


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