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The LOFAR Magnetism Key Science Project

Authors :
Anderson, James
Beck, Rainer
Bell, Michael
de Bruyn, Ger
Chyzy, Krzysztof
Eisl��ffel, Jochen
En��lin, Torsten
Fletcher, Andrew
Haverkorn, Marijke
Heald, George
Horneffer, Andreas
Noutsos, Aris
Reich, Wolfgang
Scaife, Anna
collaboration, the LOFAR
Astronomy
Source :
Magnetic Fields in the Universe III-From Laboratory and Stars to Primordial Structures, proceedings of the conference held 21-27 August, 2011 in Zakopane, Poland
Publication Year :
2012

Abstract

Measuring radio waves at low frequencies offers a new window to study cosmic magnetism, and LOFAR is the ideal radio telescope to open this window widely. The LOFAR Magnetism Key Science Project (MKSP) draws together expertise from multiple fields of magnetism science and intends to use LOFAR to tackle fundamental questions on cosmic magnetism by exploiting a variety of observational techniques. Surveys will provide diffuse emission from the Milky Way and from nearby galaxies, tracking the propagation of long-lived cosmic-ray electrons through magnetic field structures, to search for radio halos around spiral and dwarf galaxies and for magnetic fields in intergalactic space. Targeted deep-field observations of selected nearby galaxies and suspected intergalactic filaments allow sensitive mapping of weak magnetic fields through Rotation Measure (RM) grids. High-resolution observations of protostellar jets and giant radio galaxies reveal structures on small physical scales and at high redshifts, whilst pulsar RMs map large-scale magnetic structures of the Galactic disk and halo in revolutionary detail. The MKSP is responsible for the development of polarization calibration and processing, thus widening the scientific power of LOFAR.<br />Proceedings of "Magnetic Fields in the Universe: From Laboratory and Stars to Primordial Structures", 2011 Aug. 21-27 in Zakopane/Poland, eds. M. Soida et al

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Magnetic Fields in the Universe III-From Laboratory and Stars to Primordial Structures, proceedings of the conference held 21-27 August, 2011 in Zakopane, Poland
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....75f7e02181fb33f0487a99755d682142