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High-precision polarimetry of nearby stars (d<50 pc) Mapping the interstellar dust and magnetic field inside the Local Bubble

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 Added by Vilppu Piirola
 Publication date 2020
  fields Physics
and research's language is English




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We investigate the linear polarization produced by interstellar dust aligned by the magnetic field in the solar neighborhood (d< 50 pc). We also look for intrinsic effects from circumstellar processes, specifically in terms of polarization variability and wavelength dependence. We aim to detect and map dust clouds which give rise to statistically significant amounts of polarization of the starlight passing through the cloud, and to determine the interstellar magnetic field direction from the position angle of the observed polarization. High-precision broad-band (BVR) polarization observations are made of 361 stars in spectral classes F to G, in the magnitude range 4-9, with detection sensitivity at the level of or better than 10E-5 (0.001 %). Statistically significant (>3 sigma) polarization is found in 115 stars, and > 2 sigma detection in 178 stars, out of the total sample of 361 stars. Polarization maps based on these data show filament-like patterns of polarization position angles which are related to both the heliosphere geometry, the kinematics of nearby clouds, and the Interstellar Boundary EXplorer (IBEX) ribbon magnetic field. From long-term multiple observations, a number (18) of stars show evidence of intrinsic variability at the 10E-5 level. This can be attributed to circumstellar effects (e.g., debris disks and chromospheric activity). The star HD 101805 shows a peculiar wavelength dependence, indicating size distribution of scattering particles different from that of a typical interstellar medium.



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In the mapping of the local ISM it is of some interest to know where the first indications of the boundary of the Local Bubble can be measured. The Hipparcos distances combined to B-V photometry and some sort of spectral classification permit mapping of the spatial extinction distribution. Photometry is available for almost the complete Hipparcos sample and Michigan Classification is available for brighter stars south of delta = +5 deg (1900). For the northern and fainter stars spectral types, e.g. the HD types, are given but a luminosity class is often missing. The B-V photometry and the parallax do, however, permit a dwarf/giant separation due to the value of the slope of the reddening vector compared to the gradient of the main sequence in a color magnitude diagram, in the form: B-V vs. M_V+A_V = V+5(1+log(pi)), together with the rather shallow extinction present in the Hipparcos sample. We present the distribution of median A_V(l, b) for stars with Hipparcos 2 distances less than 55 pc. The northern part of the first and second quadrant has most extinction, up to 0.2 mag and the southern part of the third and fourth quadrant the slightest extinction, 0.05 mag. The boundary of the extinction minimum appears rather coherent on an angular resolution of a few degrees
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