EVN observations of 6.7-GHz methanol maser polarization in massive star-forming regions II. First statistical results
G. Surcis, W.H.T. Vlemmings, H.J. van Langevelde, B. Hutawarakorn, Kramer, and L.H. Quiroga-Nunez

TL;DR
This study uses EVN observations of 6.7-GHz methanol masers to statistically analyze magnetic field orientations in massive star-forming regions, revealing a primary alignment with large-scale outflows and providing new insights into magnetic field roles.
Contribution
First statistical analysis of methanol maser polarization in multiple massive star-forming regions, highlighting magnetic field orientations relative to outflows.
Findings
Magnetic fields are primarily aligned with large-scale outflows.
Linear polarization detected in 18% of masers, with fractions below 4.5% for unsaturated masers.
Zeeman-splitting observed in two sources, indicating magnetic field strengths.
Abstract
Magnetic fields have only recently been included in theoretical simulations of high-mass star formation. The simulations show that magnetic fields play an important role in the formation and dynamics of molecular outflows. Masers, in particular 6.7-GHz CH3OH masers, are the best probes of the magnetic field morphologies around massive young stellar objects on the smallest scales of 10-100 AU. This paper focuses on 4 massive young stellar objects, IRAS06058+2138-NIRS1, IRAS22272+6358A, S255-IR, and S231, which complement our previous 2012 sample (the first EVN group). From all these sources, molecular outflows have been detected in the past. Seven of the European VLBI Network antennas were used to measure the linear polarization and Zeeman-splitting of the 6.7-GHz CH3OH masers in the star-forming regions in this second EVN group. We detected a total of 128 CH3OH masing cloudlets.…
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