We report the results of a rocket-borne observation of [C II] 158\micron line
and far-infrared continuum emission at 152.5\micron toward the high latitude
molecular clouds in Ursa Major. We also present the results of a follow-up
observation of the millimeter ^{12}CO J=1-0 line over a selected region
observed by the rocket-borne experiment. We have discovered three small CO
cloudlets from the follow-up ^{12}CO observations. We show that these molecular
cloudlets, as well as the MBM clouds(MBM 27/28/29/30), are not gravitationally
bound. Magnetic pressure and turbulent pressure dominate the dynamic balance of
the clouds. After removing the HI-correlated and background contributions, we
find that the [C II] emission peak is displaced from the 152.5\micron and CO
peaks, while the 152.5\micron continuum emission is spatially correlated with
the CO emission. We interpret this behavior by attributing the origin of [C II]
emission to the photodissociation regions around the molecular clouds
illuminated by the local UV radiation field. We also find that the ratio of the
molecular hydrogen column density to velocity-integrated CO intensity is
1.19+-0.29x10^{20} cm^{-2} (K kms^{-1})^{-1} from the FIR continuum and the CO
data. The average [C II] /FIR intensity ratio over the MBM clouds is 0.0071,
which is close to the all sky average of 0.0082 reported by the FIRAS on the
COBE satellite. The average [C II]/CO ratio over the same regions is 420, which
is significantly lower than that of molecular clouds in the Galactic plane.Comment: 15 pages, LaTeX (aaspp4.sty) + 2 tables(apjpt4.sty) + 6 postscript
figures; accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal; Astrophys. J.
in press (Vol. 490, December 1, 1997 issue