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The Fan Region at 1.5 GHz. I: Polarized synchrotron emission extending beyond the Perseus Arm

Authors :
Hill, A. S.
Landecker, T. L.
Carretti, E.
Douglas, K.
Sun, X. H.
Gaensler, B. M.
Mao, S. A.
McClure-Griffiths, N. M.
Reich, W.
Wolleben, M.
Dickey, J. M.
Gray, A. D.
Haverkorn, M.
Leahy, J. P.
Schnitzeler, D. H. F. M.
Source :
MNRAS 467 4631 (2017)
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

The Fan Region is one of the dominant features in the polarized radio sky, long thought to be a local (distance < 500 pc) synchrotron feature. We present 1.3-1.8 GHz polarized radio continuum observations of the region from the Global Magneto-Ionic Medium Survey (GMIMS) and compare them to maps of Halpha and polarized radio continuum intensity from 0.408-353 GHz. The high-frequency (> 1 GHz) and low-frequency (< 600 MHz) emission have different morphologies, suggesting a different physical origin. Portions of the 1.5 GHz Fan Region emission are depolarized by about 30% by ionized gas structures in the Perseus Arm, indicating that this fraction of the emission originates >2 kpc away. We argue for the same conclusion based on the high polarization fraction at 1.5 GHz (about 40%). The Fan Region is offset with respect to the Galactic plane, covering -5{\deg} < b < +10{\deg}; we attribute this offset to the warp in the outer Galaxy. We discuss origins of the polarized emission, including the spiral Galactic magnetic field. This idea is a plausible contributing factor although no model to date readily reproduces all of the observations. We conclude that models of the Galactic magnetic field should account for the > 1 GHz emission from the Fan Region as a Galactic-scale, not purely local, feature.<br />Comment: Accepted to MNRAS

Details

Database :
arXiv
Journal :
MNRAS 467 4631 (2017)
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1702.02200
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stx389