Magnetic fields in nearby galaxies: prospects with future radio telescopes
Rainer Beck (MPI fuer Radioastronomie, Bonn, Germany)

TL;DR
This paper discusses the potential of future radio telescopes like LOFAR, EVLA, and SKA to advance understanding of cosmic magnetic fields through mapping, polarization, and Faraday rotation measurements in galaxies and the intergalactic medium.
Contribution
It outlines the prospects and scientific goals for future radio telescopes to study magnetic fields in the Universe, highlighting new observational strategies and capabilities.
Findings
LOFAR will map weak magnetic fields in galaxy outskirts and halos.
High-resolution polarization observations will reveal magnetic structures in galaxy disks.
All-sky Faraday RM surveys will model regular magnetic fields in various cosmic environments.
Abstract
The origin of magnetic fields in the Universe is an open problem in astrophysics and fundamental physics. Our present-day knowledge is limited to regions of strong magnetic fields and to star-forming disks of galaxies. Low-energy electrons emitting at low frequencies suffer less from energy losses and can propagate further into the intergalactic medium. The prospects are threefold: Firstly, LOFAR will map the structure of weak magnetic fields in the outer regions and halos of galaxies and in the Milky Way. Polarized emission is an excellent tracer of past interactions with other galaxies and with the interstellar medium. Secondly, high-resolution polarization observations are needed at high frequencies with the EVLA and SKA to trace the structure of magnetic fields in the disks and central regions of galaxies in unprecedented detail. The SKA can also detect polarized emission from…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRadio Astronomy Observations and Technology · Scientific Research and Discoveries · Astrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena
