Circular polarisation of synchrotron radiation in high magnetic fields
Abstract
The general model for incoherent synchrotron radiation has long been known, with the first theory being published by Westfold in 1959 and continued by Westfold and Legg in 1968. When this model was first developed it was applied to radiation from Jupiter, with a magnetic field of ≈ 1 G. Pulsars have a magnetic field of ≈ 1012 G. The Westfold and Legg model predict a circular polarization which is proportional to the square root of the magnetic field, and consequently predicts greater than 100 per cent circular polarization at high magnetic fields. Here a new model is derived based upon a more detailed analysis of the pitch angle distribution. This model is concerned with the frequency range fB0/γ <<f fB0, noting that fB0 = 2.7×107B, which for a relatively high magnetic field ( 106-108 Gauss) leaves emission in the optical range. This is much lower than the expected frequency peak for a mono-energetic particle of 0.293eB4π me cγ2. We predict the circular polarization peaks around 107G in the optical regime with the radiation almost 15 per cent circularly polarized. The linear polarization changes from about 60 to 80 per cent in the same regime. We examine implications of this for pulsar studies.