Optical polarimetry toward the Pipe nebula: Revealing the importance of the magnetic field
F. O. Alves, G. A. P. Franco, J. M. Girart

TL;DR
This study uses optical polarimetry of about 12,000 stars to map the magnetic field structure of the Pipe nebula, revealing variations in magnetic strength and orientation that relate to different evolutionary stages of the cloud.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of magnetic field properties across the Pipe nebula, linking polarization data to cloud evolution and star formation stages.
Findings
Magnetic field is perpendicular to the nebula's main filament.
Magnetic field strength varies from 17 μG to 65 μG across regions.
Three regions identified with different evolutionary states.
Abstract
Magnetic fields are proposed to play an important role in the formation and support of self-gravitating clouds and the formation and evolution of protostars in such clouds. We use R-band linear polarimetry collected for about 12000 stars in 46 fields with lines of sight toward the Pipe nebula to investigate the properties of the polarization across this dark cloud complex. Mean polarization vectors show that the magnetic field is locally perpendicular to the large filamentary structure of the Pipe nebula (the `stem'), indicating that the global collapse may have been driven by ambipolar diffusion. The polarization properties clearly change along the Pipe nebula. The northwestern end of the nebula (B59 region) is found to have a low degree of polarization and high dispersion in polarization position angle, while at the other extreme of the cloud (the `bowl') we found mean degrees of…
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