Monday, June 18, 2012

1206.3314 (S. A. Mao et al.)

New Constraints on the Galactic Halo Magnetic Field using Rotation Measures of Extragalactic Sources Towards the Outer Galaxy    [PDF]

S. A. Mao, N. M. McClure-Griffiths, B. M. Gaensler, J. C. Brown, C. L. van Eck, M. Haverkorn, P. P. Kronberg, J. M. Stil, A. Shukurov, A. R. Taylor
We present a study of the Milky Way disk and halo magnetic field, determined from observations of Faraday rotation measure (RM) towards 641 polarized extragalactic radio sources in the Galactic longitude range 100-117 degs, within 30 degs of the Galactic plane. For |b| < 15 degs, we observe a symmetric RM distribution about the Galactic plane. This is consistent with a disk field in the Perseus arm of even parity across the Galactic mid-plane. In the range 15<|b|<30 degs, we find median rotation measures of -15+/-4 rad/m^2 and -62+/-5 rad/m^2 in the northern and southern Galactic hemispheres, respectively. If the RM distribution is a signature of the large-scale field parallel to the Galactic plane, this suggests that the halo magnetic field toward the outer Galaxy does not reverse direction across the mid-plane. The variation of RM as a function of Galactic latitude in this longitude range is such that RMs become more negative at larger |b|. This is consistent with an azimuthal magnetic field of strength 2 microGauss (7 microGauss) at a height 0.8-2 kpc above (below) the Galactic plane between the local and the Perseus spiral arm. We propose that the Milky Way could possess spiral-like halo magnetic fields similar to those observed in M51.
View original: http://arxiv.org/abs/1206.3314

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