Primordial magnetogenesis
Alejandra Kandus, Kerstin E. Kunze, Christos G. Tsagas

TL;DR
This paper reviews the origins of cosmic magnetic fields, discussing primordial magnetogenesis scenarios, observational constraints, and how future data could determine their cosmological origin.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive review of primordial magnetogenesis mechanisms, their advantages, shortcomings, and the observational limits on their strength.
Findings
Current observational data constrain primordial magnetic field strength.
Various pre-recombination magnetogenesis mechanisms are analyzed.
Future observations could distinguish primordial from astrophysical magnetic fields.
Abstract
Magnetic fields appear everywhere in the universe. From stars and galaxies, all the way to galaxy clusters and remote protogalactic clouds magnetic fields of considerable strength and size have been repeatedly observed. Despite their widespread presence, however, the origin of cosmic magnetic fields is still a mystery. The galactic dynamo is believed capable of amplifying weak magnetic seeds to strengths like those measured in ours and other galaxies, but the question is where do these seed fields come from? Are they a product of late, post-recombination, physics or are they truly cosmological in origin? The idea of primordial magnetism is attractive because it makes the large-scale magnetic fields, especially those found in early protogalactic systems, easier to explain. As a result, a host of different scenarios have appeared in the literature. Nevertheless, early magnetogenesis is…
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