A Constraint on the Organization of the Galactic Center Magnetic Field Using Faraday Rotation
C. J. Law (1), M. A. Brentjens (2), and G. Novak (3) ((1) UC Berkeley,, (2) ASTRON, (3) Northwestern Univ.)

TL;DR
This study uses VLA observations to map the Faraday rotation measure in the Galactic center, revealing a large-scale, organized magnetic field structure that is predominantly poloidal and extends over hundreds of parsecs.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed RM map of the Galactic center region, demonstrating the magnetic field's large-scale organization and its relation to the plasma and filament structures.
Findings
RM varies from +330 to -880 rad/m2 across the region
The magnetic field is organized on ~300 pc scales
The field is predominantly poloidal, pointing south to north
Abstract
We present new 6 and 20 cm Very Large Array (VLA) observations of polarized continuum emission of roughly 0.5 square degrees of the Galactic center (GC) region. The 6 cm observations detect diffuse linearly-polarized emission throughout the region with a brightness of roughly 1 mJy per 15"x10" beam. The Faraday rotation measure (RM) toward this polarized emission has structure on degree size scales and ranges from roughly +330 rad/m2 east of the dynamical center (Sgr A) to -880 rad/m2 west of the dynamical center. This RM structure is also seen toward several nonthermal radio filaments, which implies that they have a similar magnetic field orientation and constrains models for their origin. Modeling shows that the RM and its change with Galactic longitude are best explained by the high electron density and strong magnetic field of the GC region. Considering the emissivity of the GC…
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