A VLA Study of Newly-Discovered Southern Latitude Non-Thermal Filaments in the Galactic Center: Polarimetric and Magnetic Field Properties
A population of structures unique to the Galactic Center (GC), known as the non-thermal filaments (NTFs), has been studied for over 40 years, but much remains unknown about them. In particular, there is no widely-accepted and unified understanding for how the relativistic electrons illuminating thes...
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Zusammenfassung: | A population of structures unique to the Galactic Center (GC), known as the
non-thermal filaments (NTFs), has been studied for over 40 years, but much
remains unknown about them. In particular, there is no widely-accepted and
unified understanding for how the relativistic electrons illuminating these
structures are generated. One possibility is that there are compact and
extended sources of Cosmic Rays (CRs), which then diffuse along magnetic flux
tubes leading to the illumination of the NTFs through synchrotron emission. In
this work, we present and discuss the polarimetric distributions associated
with a set of faint NTFs in the GC that have only been studied in total
intensity previously. We compare the derived polarized intensity, rotation
measure, and intrinsic magnetic field distributions for these structures with
the results obtained for previously observed GC NTFs. The results are then used
to enhance our understanding of the large-scale polarimetric properties of the
GC. We then use the derived polarimetric distributions to constrain models for
the mechanisms generating the relativistic electrons that illuminate these
structures. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2408.16745 |