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First Observation of the Submillimeter Polarization Spectrum in a Translucent Molecular Cloud

Authors :
Tristan G. Matthews
Peter A. R. Ade
Lorenzo Moncelsi
Fabio P. Santos
Zhi-Yun Li
Bradley Dober
Francesco E. Angilè
Douglas Scott
Jeff Klein
Giorgio Savini
Peter Ashton
Calvin B. Netterfield
Giles Novak
Laura M. Fissel
Nicholas Galitzki
Frédérick Poidevin
Nicholas Thomas
Jamil A. Shariff
Mark J. Devlin
Juan D. Soler
Fumitaka Nakamura
Andrei Korotkov
Derek Ward-Thompson
Gregory S. Tucker
Peter G. Martin
Enzo Pascale
Natalie N. Gandilo
Yasuo Fukui
Steven J. Benton
Carole Tucker
Source :
The Astrophysical Journal, NASA Astrophysics Data System
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Polarized emission from aligned dust is a crucial tool for studies of magnetism in the ISM and a troublesome contaminant for studies of CMB polarization. In each case, an understanding of the significance of the polarization signal requires well-calibrated physical models of dust grains. Despite decades of progress in theory and observation, polarized dust models remain largely underconstrained. During its 2012 flight, the balloon-borne telescope BLASTPol obtained simultaneous broad-band polarimetric maps of a translucent molecular cloud at 250, 350, and 500 microns. Combining these data with polarimetry from the Planck 850 micron band, we have produced a submillimeter polarization spectrum for a cloud of this type for the first time. We find the polarization degree to be largely constant across the four bands. This result introduces a new observable with the potential to place strong empirical constraints on ISM dust polarization models in a previously inaccessible density regime. Comparing with models by Draine and Fraisse (2009), our result disfavors two of their models for which all polarization arises due only to aligned silicate grains. By creating simple models for polarized emission in a translucent cloud, we verify that extinction within the cloud should have only a small effect on the polarization spectrum shape compared to the diffuse ISM. Thus we expect the measured polarization spectrum to be a valid check on diffuse ISM dust models. The general flatness of the observed polarization spectrum suggests a challenge to models where temperature and alignment degree are strongly correlated across major dust components.<br />Comment: 17 pages, 10 figures. Submitted to ApJ

Details

ISSN :
15384357, 0004637X, 00670049, 00046361, 15383881, and 15383873
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Astrophysical Journal
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....1f8b076500b223b52b87d7b6f99e0b53
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/aab3ca