The Orion-Taurus ridge: a synchrotron radio loop at the edge of the Orion-Eridanus superbubble
Abstract
Large-scale synchrotron loops are recognized as the main source of diffuse radio-continuum emission in the Galaxy at intermediate and high Galactic latitudes. Their origin, however, remains rather unexplained. Using a combination of multi-frequency data in the radio band of total and polarized intensities, for the first time in this letter, we associate one arc -- hereafter, the Orion-Taurus ridge -- with the wall of the most prominent stellar-feedback blown shell in the Solar neighborhood, namely the Orion-Eridanus superbubble. We traced the Orion-Taurus ridge using 3D maps of interstellar dust extinction and column-density maps of molecular gas, N H2. We found the Orion-Taurus ridge at a distance of 400\,pc, with a plane-of-the-sky extent of 180\,pc. Its median N H2 value is (1.4+2.6-0.6)× 1021 cm-2. Thanks to the broadband observations below 100 MHz of the Long Wavelength Array, we also computed the low-frequency spectral-index map of synchrotron emissivity, β, in the Orion-Taurus ridge. We found a flat distribution of β with a median value of -2.24+0.03-0.02 that we interpreted in terms of depletion of low-energy (< GeV) cosmic-ray electrons in recent supernova remnants (105 - 106 yrs). Our results are consistent with plane-of-the-sky magnetic-field strengths in the Orion-Taurus ridge larger than a few tens of μG (> 30 - 40 \,μG). We report the first detection of diffuse synchrotron emission from cold-neutral, partly molecular, gas in the surroundings of the Orion-Eridanus superbubble. This observation opens a new perspective to study the multiphase and magnetized interstellar medium with the advent of future high-sensitivity radio facilities, such as the C-Band All-Sky Survey and the Square Kilometre Array.
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