Tracing Magnetic Fields with Ground State Alignment
Huirong Yan, A. Lazarian

TL;DR
This paper introduces ground state alignment as a novel method for detecting magnetic field directions in diffuse astrophysical media through polarization measurements influenced by anisotropic radiation and magnetic precession.
Contribution
It presents the physical basis of atomic realignment, its advantages over the Hanle effect for weak fields, and discusses its applications to various cosmic environments and early universe diagnostics.
Findings
Atomic realignment can detect magnetic fields as weak as 10^{-15} G.
The polarization of transitions between fine and hyperfine states reveals magnetic field orientation.
Laboratory and observational evidence supports the feasibility of this method.
Abstract
Observational studies of magnetic fields are vital as magnetic fields play a crucial role in various astrophysical processes, including star formation, accretion of matter, transport processes (e.g., transport of heat), and cosmic rays. We identified a process "ground state alignment" as a new way to determine the magnetic field direction in diffuse medium. The alignment is due to anisotropic radiation impinging on the atom/ion, while the magnetic field induces precession and realign the atom/ion and therefore the polarization of the emitted or absorbed radiation reflects the direction of the magnetic field. The atoms get aligned at their low levels and, as the life-time of the atoms/ions we deal with is long, the alignment induced by anisotropic radiation is susceptible to weak magnetic fields (G). Compared to the upper level Hanle effect, atomic…
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