The structure of magnetic fields in spiral galaxies: a radio and far-infrared polarimetric analysis
Abstract
We propose and apply a method to quantify the morphology of the large-scale ordered magnetic fields (B-fields) in galaxies. This method is adapted from the analysis of Event Horizon Telescope polarization data. We compute a linear decomposition of the azimuthal modes of the polarization field in radial galactocentric bins. We apply this approach to five low-inclination spiral galaxies with both far-infrared (FIR: 154 μm) dust polarimetric observations taken from the Survey of ExtragALactic magnetiSm with SOFIA (SALSA) and radio (6 cm) synchrotron polarization observations. We find that the main contribution to the B-field structure of these spiral galaxies comes from the m=2 and m=0 modes at FIR wavelengths and the m=2 mode at radio wavelengths. The m=2 mode has a spiral structure and is directly related to the magnetic pitch angle, while m=0 has a constant B-field orientation. The FIR data tend to have a higher relative contribution from other modes than the radio data. The extreme case is NGC 6946: all modes contribute similarly in the FIR, while m=2 still dominates in the radio. The average magnetic pitch angle in the FIR data is smaller and has greater angular dispersion than in the radio, indicating that the B-fields in the disk midplane traced by FIR dust polarization are more tightly wound and more chaotic than the B-field structure in the radio, which probes a larger volume. We argue that our approach is more flexible and model-independent than standard techniques, while still producing consistent results where directly comparable.
Turn this paper into a lesson
ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.