ALMA's Polarized View of 10 Protostars in the Perseus Molecular Cloud

We present 870 m ALMA dust polarization observations of 10 young Class 0/I protostars in the Perseus Molecular Cloud. At ∼0 35 (80 au) resolution, all of our sources show some degree of polarization, with most (9/10) showing significantly extended emission in the polarized continuum. Each source has...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Astrophysical journal 2018-03, Vol.855 (2), p.92
Hauptverfasser: Cox, Erin G., Harris, Robert J., Looney, Leslie W., Li, Zhi-Yun, Yang, Haifeng, J. Tobin, John, Stephens, Ian
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:We present 870 m ALMA dust polarization observations of 10 young Class 0/I protostars in the Perseus Molecular Cloud. At ∼0 35 (80 au) resolution, all of our sources show some degree of polarization, with most (9/10) showing significantly extended emission in the polarized continuum. Each source has incredibly intricate polarization signatures. In particular, all three disk-candidates have polarization vectors roughly along the minor axis, which is indicative of polarization produced by dust scattering. On ∼100 au scales, the polarization is at a relatively low level ( 1%) and is quite ordered. In sources with significant envelope emission, the envelope is typically polarized at a much higher ( 5%) level and has a far more disordered morphology. We compute the cumulative probability distributions for both the small (disk-scale) and large (envelope-scale) polarization percentage. We find that the two are intrinsically different, even after accounting for the different detection thresholds in the high/low surface brightness regions. We perform Kolmogorov-Smirnov and Anderson-Darling tests on the distributions of angle offsets of the polarization from the outflow axis. We find disk-candidate sources are different from the non-disk-candidate sources. We conclude that the polarization on the 100 au scale is consistent with the signature of dust scattering for disk-candidates and that the polarization on the envelope-scale in all sources may come from another mechanism, most likely magnetically aligned grains.
ISSN:0004-637X
1538-4357
DOI:10.3847/1538-4357/aaacd2