No Arabic abstract
We present a method for parametric modelling of the physical components of the Galaxys magnetised interstellar medium, simulating the observables, and mapping out the likelihood space using a Markov Chain Monte-Carlo analysis. We then demonstrate it using total and polarised synchrotron emission data as well as rotation measures of extragalactic sources. With these three datasets, we define and study three components of the magnetic field: the large-scale coherent field, the small-scale isotropic random field, and the ordered field. In this first paper, we use only data along the Galactic plane and test a simple 2D logarithmic spiral model for the magnetic field that includes a compression and a shearing of the random component giving rise to an ordered component. We demonstrate with simulations that the method can indeed constrain multiple parameters yielding measures of, for example, the ratios of the magnetic field components. Though subject to uncertainties in thermal and cosmic ray electron densities and depending on our particular model parametrisation, our preliminary analysis shows that the coherent component is a small fraction of the total magnetic field and that an ordered component comparable in strength to the isotropic random component is required to explain the polarisation fraction of synchrotron emission. We outline further work to extend this type of analysis to study the magnetic spiral arm structure, the details of the turbulence as well as the 3D structure of the magnetic field.
A new method for measuring the global magnetic field structure of the Galactic plane is presented. We have determined the near-infrared polarization of field stars around 52 Cepheids found in recent surveys toward the Galactic plane. The Cepheids are located at the galactic longitudes $-10^{circ}leq , l, leq +10.5^{circ}$ and latitudes $-0.22^{circ}leq , l, leq +0.45^{circ}$, and their distances are mainly in the range of 10 to 15 kpc from the Sun. Simple classification of the sightlines is made with the polarization behavior vs. $H-K_{mathrm S}$ color of field stars, and typical examples of three types are presented. Then, division of the field stars in each line of sight into (a) foreground, (b) bulge, and (c) background is made with the $Gaia$ DR2 catalog, the peak of the $H-K_{mathrm S}$ color histogram, and $H-K_{mathrm S}$ colors consistent with the distance of the Cepheid in the center, respectively. Differential analysis between them enables us to examine the magnetic field structure more definitely than just relying on the $H-K_{mathrm S}$ color difference. In one line of sight, the magnetic field is nearly parallel to the Galactic plane and well aligned all the way from the Sun to the Cepheid position on the other side of the Galactic center. Contrary to our preconceived ideas, however, sightlines having such well-aligned magnetic fields in the Galactic plane are rather small in number. At least 36 Cepheid fields indicate random magnetic field components are significant. Two Cepheid fields indicate that the magnetic field orientation changes more than 45 in the line of sight. The polarization increase per color change $P$/ ($H-K_{mathrm S}$) varies from region to region, reflecting the change in the ratio of the magnetic field strength and the turbulence strength.
Faraday rotation provides a valuable tracer of magnetic fields in the interstellar medium; catalogs of Faraday rotation measures provide key observations for studies of the Galactic magnetic field. We present a new catalog of rotation measures derived from the Canadian Galactic Plane Survey, covering a large region of the Galactic plane spanning 52 deg < l < 192 deg, -3 deg < b < 5 deg, along with northern and southern latitude extensions around l ~ 105 deg. We have derived rotation measures for 2234 sources (4 of which are known pulsars), 75% of which have no previous measurements, over an area of approximately 1300 square degrees. These new rotation measures increase the measurement density for this region of the Galactic plane by a factor of two.
The IMAGINE Consortium aims to bring modeling of the magnetic field of the Milky Way to a next level, by using Bayesian inference. IMAGINE includes an open-source modular software pipeline that optimizes parameters in a user-defined Galactic magnetic field model against various selected observational datasets. Bayesian priors can be added as external probabilistic constraints of the model parameters. These conference proceedings describe the science goals of the IMAGINE Consortium, the software pipeline and its inputs, viz observational data sets, Galactic magnetic field models, and Bayesian priors.
We search for observational signatures of magnetic helicity in data from all-sky radio polarization surveys of the Milky Way Galaxy. Such a detection would help confirm the dynamo origin of the field and may provide new observational constraints for its shape. We compare our observational results to simulated observations for both a simple helical field, and for a more complex field that comes from a solution to the dynamo equation. Our simulated observations show that the large-scale helicity of a magnetic field is reflected in the large-scale structure of the fractional polarization derived from the observed synchrotron radiation and Faraday depth of the diffuse Galactic synchrotron emission. Comparing the models with the observations provides evidence for the presence of a quadrupolar magnetic field with a vertical component that is pointing away from the observer in both hemispheres of the Milky Way Galaxy. Since there is no reason to believe that the Galactic magnetic field is unusual when compared to other galaxies, this result provides further support for the dynamo origin of large-scale magnetic fields in galaxies.
The role of magnetic fields in the multi-phase interstellar medium (ISM) is explored using magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) simulations that include energy injection by supernova (SN) explosions and allow for dynamo action. Apart from providing additional pressure support of the gas layer, magnetic fields reduce the density contrast between the warm and hot gas phases and quench galactic outflows. A dynamo-generated, self-consistent large-scale magnetic field affects the ISM differently from an artificially imposed, unidirectional magnetic field.