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MagMar III -- Resisting the Pressure, Is the Magnetic Field Overwhelmed in NGC6334I?

Authors :
Cortes, Paulo C.
Girart, Josep M.
Sanhueza, Patricio
Liu, Junhao
Martin, Sergio
Stephens, Ian W.
Beuther, Henrik
Koch, Patrick M.
Fernandez-Lopez, M.
Sanchez-Monge, Alvaro
Wang, Jia-Wei
Morii, Kaho
Li, Shanghuo
Saha, Piyali
Zhang, Qizhou
Rebolledo, David
Zapata, Luis A.
Kang, Ji-hyun
Jiao, Wenyu
Kim, Jongsoo
Cheng, Yu
Hwang, Jihye
Chung, Eun Jung
Choudhury, Spandan
Lyo, A-Ran
Olguin, Fernando
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

We report on ALMA observations of polarized dust emission at 1.2 mm from NGC6334I, a source known for its significant flux outbursts. Between five months, our data show no substantial change in total intensity and a modest 8\% variation in linear polarization, suggesting a phase of stability or the conclusion of the outburst. The magnetic field, inferred from this polarized emission, displays a predominantly radial pattern from North-West to South-East with intricate disturbances across major cores, hinting at spiral structures. Energy analysis of CS$(J=5 \rightarrow 4)$ emission yields an outflow energy of approximately $3.5\times10^{45}$ ergs, aligning with previous interferometric studies. Utilizing the Davis-Chandrasekhar-Fermi method, we determined magnetic field strengths ranging from 1 to 11 mG, averaging at 1.9 mG. This average increases to 4 $\pm 1$ mG when incorporating Zeeman measurements. Comparative analyses using gravitational, thermal, and kinetic energy maps reveal that magnetic energy is significantly weaker, possibly explaining the observed field morphology. We also find that the energy in the outflows and the expanding cometary {\HII} region is also larger than the magnetic energy, suggesting that protostellar feedback maybe the dominant driver behind the injection of turbulence in NGC6334I at the scales sampled by our data. The gas in NGC6334I predominantly exhibits supersonic and trans-Alfvenic conditions, transitioning towards a super-Alfvenic regime, underscoring a diminished influence of the magnetic field with increasing gas density. These observations are in agreement with prior polarization studies at 220 GHz, enriching our understanding of the dynamic processes in high-mass star-forming regions.<br />Comment: Accepted for Publication at the Astrophysical Journal

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2406.14663
Document Type :
Working Paper