Downstream depolarization in the Sausage relic: a 1-4 GHz Very Large Array study

Abstract

Radio relics are elongated sources related to shocks driven by galaxy cluster merger events. Although these objects are highly polarized at GHz frequencies ( 20\%), high-resolution studies of their polarization properties are still lacking. We present the first high-resolution and high-sensitivity polarimetry study of the merging galaxy cluster CIZA J2242.8+5301 in the 1-4 GHz frequency band. We use the QU-fitting approach to model the Stokes I, Q and U emission, obtaining best-fit intrinsic polarization fraction (p0), intrinsic polarization angle (0), Rotation Measure (RM) and wavelength-dependent depolarization (σ RM) maps of the cluster. Our analysis focuses on the northern relic (RN). For the first time in a radio relic, we observe a decreasing polarization fraction in the downstream region. Our findings are possibly explained by geometrical projections and/or by decreasing of the magnetic field anisotropy towards the cluster center. From the amount of depolarization of the only detected background radio galaxy, we estimate a turbulent magnetic field strength of B turb5.6~μGauss in the relic. Finally, we observe Rotation Measure fluctuations of about 30 rad m-2 around at the median value of 140.8 rad m-2 at the relic position.

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