Observational Constraints on Interstellar Grain Alignment
B-G Andersson, S.B. Potter

TL;DR
This study investigates how interstellar dust grain alignment depends on the radiation environment, using multicolor polarimetry and infrared data across several molecular clouds, revealing a correlation between polarization wavelength and local radiation conditions.
Contribution
It demonstrates a linear relationship between the wavelength of maximum polarization and the radiation environment, clarifies the role of line of sight effects, and explores the influence of young stellar objects on grain alignment.
Findings
Lambda_max correlates with radiation environment across clouds.
Line of sight effects cause scatter in lambda_max vs. A_V.
YSOs influence grain alignment via plasma damping effects.
Abstract
We present new multicolor photo-polarimetry of stars behind the Southern Coalsack. Analyzed together with multiband polarization data from the literature, probing the Chamaeleon I, Musca, rho Opiuchus, R CrA and Taurus clouds, we show that the wavelength of maximum polarization (lambda_max) is linearly correlated with the radiation environment of the grains. Using Far-Infrared emission data, we show that the large scatter seen in previous studies of lambda_max as a function of A_V is primarily due to line of sight effects causing some A_V measurements to not be a good tracer of the extinction (radiation field strength) seen by the grains being probed. The derived slopes in lambda_max vs. A_V, for the individual clouds, are consistent with a common value, while the zero intercepts scale with the average values of the ratios of total-to-selective extinction (R_V) for the individual…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astro and Planetary Science
