Adaptive optics assisted near-infrared polarization measurements of sources in the Galactic Center
Rainer M. Buchholz, Gunther Witzel, Rainer Sch\"odel, Andreas Eckart,, Markus Bremer, Koraljka Muzic

TL;DR
This study uses adaptive optics-assisted near-infrared polarimetry to analyze stellar sources in the Galactic Center, revealing polarization patterns, magnetic field orientations, and detailed properties of bow-shock sources with unprecedented resolution.
Contribution
It provides the first high-resolution NIR polarimetric maps of the Galactic Center, including detailed analysis of bow-shock sources and local polarization effects.
Findings
Foreground polarization aligned with the Galactic plane.
Intrinsic polarization of sources consistent with dust scattering and magnetic fields.
First separation of IRS 21 bow shock from its central source in Ks-band.
Abstract
The goals of this work are to provide NIR polarimetry of the stellar sources in the central pc at the resolution of an 8m telescope for the first time, along with new insights into the nature of the known bright bow-shock sources. We use AO assisted observations with the ESO VLT in the H- and Ks-band, applying high precision photometric methods developed for crowded fields and a new polarimetric calibration for NACO to produce polarization maps of the central 3"x19", in addition to spatially resolved polarimetry and a variability analysis on the extended sources. We find foreground polarization parallel to the Galactic plane, with averages of (4.6+/-0.6)% at 26{\deg}+/-6{\deg} (Ks) and (9.3+/-1.3)% at 20{\deg}+/-6{\deg} (H) in the center. At larger distances from the center, we find different polarization parameters: (7.5+/-1.0)% at 11{\deg}+/-6{\deg} (Ks) and (12.1+/-2.1)% at…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
