Magnetic fields in supernova remnants and pulsar-wind nebulae
S.P. Reynolds, B.M. Gaensler, F. Bocchino

TL;DR
This review discusses magnetic field observations in supernova remnants and pulsar-wind nebulae, highlighting amplification mechanisms, measurement techniques, and implications for particle acceleration and remnant morphology.
Contribution
It synthesizes observational data and models to elucidate magnetic field strengths, orientations, and their role in shock processes and nebulae structures.
Findings
Magnetic fields are amplified by shocks in supernova remnants.
Synchrotron X-ray emission indicates strong, amplified magnetic fields.
Pulsar-wind nebulae exhibit high polarization and diverse magnetic geometries.
Abstract
We review the observations of supernova remnants (SNRs) and pulsar-wind nebulae (PWNe) that give information on the strength and orientation of magnetic fields. Radio polarimetry gives the degree of order of magnetic fields, and the orientation of the ordered component. Many young shell supernova remnants show evidence for synchrotron X-ray emission. The spatial analysis of this emission suggests that magnetic fields are amplified by one to two orders of magnitude in strong shocks. Detection of several remnants in TeV gamma rays implies a lower limit on the magnetic-field strength (or a measurement, if the emission process is inverse-Compton upscattering of cosmic microwave background photons). Upper limits to GeV emission similarly provide lower limits on magnetic-field strengths. In the historical shell remnants, lower limits on B range from 25 to 1000 microGauss. Two remnants show…
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