1 research outputs found
Multi-wavelength polarimetric study towards the open cluster NGC 1893
We present multi-wavelength linear polarimetric observations for 44 stars of
the NGC 1893 young open cluster region along with V-band polarimetric
observations of stars of other four open clusters located between l ~160 to
~175 degree. We found evidence for the presence of two dust layers located at a
distance of ~170 pc and ~360 pc. The dust layers produce a polarization Pv
~2.2%. It is evident from the clusters studied in the present work that, in the
Galactic longitude range l ~160 to 175 degree and within the Galactic plane
(|b| < 2 degree), the polarization angles remain almost constant, with a mean
~163 degree and a dispersion of 6 degree. The small dispersion in polarization
angle could be due to the presence of uniform dust layer beyond 1 kpc. Present
observations reveal that in case of NGC 1893, the foreground two dust layers,
in addition to the intracluster medium, seems to be responsible for the
polarization effects. It is also found that towards the direction of NGC 1893,
the dust layer that exists between 2-3 kpc has a negligible contribution
towards the total observed polarization. The weighted mean for percentage of
polarization (Pmax) and the wavelength at maximum polarization ({\lambda}max)
are found to be 2.59 \pm 0.02% and 0.55 \pm 0.01 \mum respectively. The
estimated mean value of {\lambda}max indicates that the average size of the
dust grains within the cluster is similar to that in the general interstellar
medium. The spatial variation of the polarization is found to decrease towards
the outer region of the cluster. In the present work, we support the notion, as
already has been shown in previous studies, that polarimetry, in combination
with (U-B)/(B-V) colour-colour diagram, is a useful tool for identifying
non-members in a cluster.Comment: 36 pages, 12 figures, 10 tables, accepted for the publication in
MNRA
