The relative orientation between local magnetic field and Galactic plane in low latitude dark clouds

Abstract

In this work, we study the magnetic field morphology of selected star-forming clouds spread over the galactic latitude (b) range, -10 to 10. The polarimetric observation of clouds CB24, CB27 and CB188 are conducted to study the magnetic field geometry of those clouds from ARIES, Manora Peak, Nainital, India. These observations are combined with those of 14 further low latitude clouds available in the literature. Analyzing the polarimetric data of 17 clouds, we find that the alignment between the envelope magnetic field (θBenv) and Galactic plane (θGP) of the low-latitude clouds varies with their galactic longitudes (l). We observe a strong correlation between the longitude (l) and the offset (θoff=|θBenv-θGP|) which shows that θBenv is parallel to the Galactic plane (GP) when the clouds are situated in the region, 115<l<250. However, θBenv has its own local deflection irrespective of the orientation of θGP when the clouds are at l<100 and l>250. To check the consistency of our results, the stellar polarization data available at Heiles (2000) catalogue are overlaid on DSS image of the clouds having mean polarization vector of field stars. The results are almost consistent with the Heiles data. The effect of turbulence of the cloud is also studied which may play an important role in causing the misalignment phenomenon observed between θBenv and θGP. We have used Herschel SPIRE 500 μ m and SCUBA 850 μ m dust continuum emission maps in our work to understand the density structure of the clouds.

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