Cosmic rays and the magnetic field in the nearby starburst galaxy NGC253 III. Helical magnetic fields in the nuclear outflow
Volker Heesen (1), Rainer Beck (2), Marita Krause (2), Ralf-J\"urgen, Dettmar (3) ((1) University of Hertfordshire, (2) MPIfR, (3), Ruhr-Universit\"at Bochum)

TL;DR
This study reveals helical magnetic fields in the nuclear outflow of NGC 253, showing how magnetic structures influence outflow collimation and cosmic-ray electron behavior in a starburst galaxy.
Contribution
It provides detailed observations of magnetic field configurations, including helical structures, in the nuclear outflow of NGC 253, advancing understanding of magnetic influence in starburst-driven outflows.
Findings
Filamentary magnetic structures align with outflow boundaries.
Magnetic fields form a helix with increasing azimuthal component up to 1200 pc.
Magnetic fields likely aid in collimating the nuclear outflow.
Abstract
Magnetic fields are a good tracer for gas compression by shock waves, which can be caused by interaction of star-formation driven outflows from individual star formation sites as described in the chimney model. We study the magnetic field structure in the central part of the nuclear starburst galaxy NGC 253 with spatial resolutions between 40 and 150 pc to detect any filamentary emission associated with the nuclear outflow. New VLA observations at 3 cm with 7.5" resolution were combined with archive data at 20 and 6 cm. We find filamentary radio continuum emission in a geometrical distribution that we interpret as the boundary of the northwestern nuclear outflow cone. The scaleheight of the continuum emission is 150+/-20 pc, regardless of the observing frequency. The equipartition magnetic field strength is 46+/-10 microG for the total field and 21+/-5 microG for the regular field in…
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