94 research outputs found
Submillimeter and Far-Infrared Polarimetric Observations of Magnetic Fields in Star-Forming Regions
Observations of star-forming regions by the current and upcoming generation
of submillimeter polarimeters will shed new light on the evolution of magnetic
fields over the cloud-to-core size scales involved in the early stages of the
star formation process. Recent wide-area and high-sensitivity polarization
observations have drawn attention to the challenges of modeling magnetic field
structure of star forming regions, due to variations in dust polarization
properties in the interstellar medium. However, these observations also for the
first time provide sufficient information to begin to break the degeneracy
between polarization efficiency variations and depolarization due to magnetic
field sub-beam structure, and thus to accurately infer magnetic field
properties in the star-forming interstellar medium. In this article we discuss
submillimeter and far-infrared polarization observations of star-forming
regions made with single-dish instruments. We summarize past, present and
forthcoming single-dish instrumentation, and discuss techniques which have been
developed or proposed to interpret polarization observations, both in order to
infer the morphology and strength of the magnetic field, and in order to
determine the environments in which dust polarization observations reliably
trace the magnetic field. We review recent polarimetric observations of
molecular clouds, filaments, and starless and protostellar cores, and discuss
how the application of the full range of modern analysis techniques to recent
observations will advance our understanding of the role played by the magnetic
field in the early stages of star formation.Comment: 29 pages, 12 figures, 1 table, published in Frontiers in Astronomy
and Space Sciences. Open-access, available here:
https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fspas.2019.00015/ful
On the origin of de-polarization in CB54
We present polarimetric observations of the Bok globule CB54 in the far-infrared via SOFIA/HAWC+ bands D (154 (Formula presented.) m) and E (214 (Formula presented.) m). We detect polarization with mean polarization degrees of (Formula presented.) (Formula presented.) 5.4 (Formula presented.) and (Formula presented.) (Formula presented.) 5.4 (Formula presented.) at 154 and 214 (Formula presented.) m, respectively. The polarization degree decreases toward the inner region of CB54, revealing a āpolarization holeā. This finding can be explained by the impact of dichroic absorption counteracting the effect of polarized emission. The same effect allows us to explain the observed wavelength-dependent orientation of the linear polarization in the dense, central region of CB54. The polarization pattern appears uniform at core scales but un-ordered at larger scalesāsimilar to what was found in previous studies of this object. The mean polarization angle amounts to (Formula presented.) = 62.4 (Formula presented.) 44.5Ā° and (Formula presented.) = (Formula presented.) 60.0Ā° at 154 and 214 (Formula presented.) m, respectively
The JCMT Nearby Galaxies Legacy Survey: SCUBA-2 observations of nearby galaxies
We present 850m observations of a sample of 8 nearby spiral galaxies,
made using the SCUBA-2 camera on the James Clerk Maxwell Telescope (JCMT) as
part of the JCMT Nearby Galaxies Legacy Survey (NGLS). We corrected our data
for the presence of the CO line in the SCUBA-2 850m
bandwidth using NGLS HARP data, finding a typical CO contribution of
%. We measured dust column densities, temperatures and opacity indices
by fitting spectral energy distributions constructed from SCUBA-2 and archival
Herschel observations, and used archival GALEX and Spitzer data to make maps of
surface density of star formation (). Typically, comparing
SCUBA-2-derived H surface densities () to gives shallow star formation law indices within galaxies, with
SCUBA-2-derived values typically being sublinear and Herschel-derived values
typically being broadly linear. This difference is likely due to the effects of
atmospheric filtering on the SCUBA-2 data. Comparing the mean values of
and of the galaxies in our sample returns
a steeper star formation law index, broadly consistent with both the
Kennicutt-Schmidt value of 1.4 and linearity. Our results show that a SCUBA-2
detection is a good predictor of star formation. We suggest that Herschel
emission traces gas in regions which will form stars on timescales
Myr, comparable to the star formation timescale traced by GALEX and Spitzer
data, while SCUBA-2 preferentially traces the densest gas within these regions,
which likely forms stars on shorter timescales.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS. 15 pages, 12 figures, 8 tables
(plus 15 pages of appendices, with 31 figures
Magnetic fields in the Horsehead Nebula
We present the first polarized dust emission measurements of the Horsehead
Nebula, obtained using the POL-2 polarimeter on the Submillimetre Common-User
Bolometer Array 2 (SCUBA-2) camera on the James Clerk Maxwell Telescope (JCMT).
The Horsehead Nebula contains two sub-millimeter sources, a photodissociation
region (PDR; SMM1) and a starless core (SMM2). We see well-ordered magnetic
fields in both sources. We estimated plane-of-sky magnetic field strengths of
569 and 12921 G in SMM1 and SMM2, respectively, and obtained
mass-to-flux ratios and Alfv\'en Mach numbers of less than 0.6, suggesting that
the magnetic field can resist gravitational collapse and that magnetic pressure
exceeds internal turbulent pressure in these sources. In SMM2, the kinetic and
gravitational energies are comparable to one another, but less than the
magnetic energy. We suggest a schematic view of the overall magnetic field
structure in the Horsehead Nebula. Magnetic field lines in SMM1 appear have
been compressed and reordered during the formation of the PDR, while the likely
more-embedded SMM2 may have inherited its field from that of the pre-shock
molecular cloud. The magnetic fields appear to currently play an important role
in supporting both sources.Comment: Accepted to the Astronomical Journa
First Observations of the Magnetic Field inside the Pillars of Creation : Results from the BISTRO Survey
We present the first high-resolution, submillimeter-wavelength polarimetric observations ofāand thus direct observations of the magnetic field morphology withināthe dense gas of the Pillars of Creation in M16. These 850 Ī¼m observations, taken as part of the B-Fields in Star-forming Region Observations Survey (BISTRO) using the POL-2 polarimeter on the Submillimeter Common-User Bolometer Array 2 (SCUBA-2) camera on the James Clerk Maxwell Telescope (JCMT), show that the magnetic field runs along the length of the Pillars, perpendicular to and decoupled from the field in the surrounding photoionized cloud. Using the ChandrasekharāFermi method we estimate a plane-of-sky magnetic field strength of 170ā320 Ī¼G in the Pillars, consistent with their having been formed through the compression of gas with initially weak magnetization. The observed magnetic field strength and morphology suggests that the magnetic field may be slowing the Pillars' evolution into cometary globules. We thus hypothesize that the evolution and lifetime of the Pillars may be strongly influenced by the strength of the coupling of their magnetic field to that of their parent photoionized cloudāi.e., that the Pillars' longevity results from magnetic support
Magnetic fields and outflows in CB 54
We have observed the large Bok globule CB 54 in 850-Ī¼m polarized light using the POL-2 polarimeter on the James Clerk Maxwell Telescope (JCMT). We find that the magnetic field in the periphery of the globule shows a significant, ordered deviation from the mean-field direction in the globule centre. This deviation appears to correspond with the extended but relatively weak 12CO outflow emanating from the Class 0 sources at the centre of the globule. Energetics analysis suggests that if the outflow is reshaping the magnetic field in the globuleās periphery, then we can place an upper limit of 0.1āpc
Magnetic fields and outflows in the large Bok globule CB 54
We have observed the large Bok globule CB 54 in 850 Ī¼m polarised light using the POL-2 polarimeter on the James Clerk Maxwell Telescope (JCMT). We find that the magnetic field in the periphery of the globule shows significant, ordered deviation from the mean field direction in the globule centre. This deviation appears to correspond with the extended but relatively weak 12CO outflow emanating from the Class 0 sources at the centre of the globule. Energetics analysis suggests that if the outflow is reshaping the magnetic field in the globuleās periphery, then we can place an upper limit of 0.1 pc
Submillimetre observations of the two-component magnetic field in M82
We observed the starburst galaxy M82 in 850 Āµm polarized light with the POL-2 polarimeter on the James Clerk Maxwell Telescope (JCMT). We interpret our observed polarization geometry as tracing a two-component magnetic field: a poloidal component aligned with the galactic āsuperwindā, extending to a height ā¼350 pc above and below the central bar; and a spiral-arm-aligned, or possibly toroidal, component in the plane of the galaxy, which dominates the 850 Āµm polarized light distribution at galactocentric radii ā³2 kpc. Comparison of our results with recent High-resolution Airborne Wideband Camera Plus (HAWC+) measurements of the field in the dust entrained by the M82 superwind suggests that the superwind breaks out from the central starburst at ā¼350 pc above the plane of the galaxy
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