Polarized synchrotron radiation from the Andromeda Galaxy M31 and background sources at 350 MHz
Ren\'e Gie{\ss}\"ubel, George Heald, Rainer Beck, Tigran Arshakian

TL;DR
This study detects diffuse polarized radio emission from the Andromeda Galaxy at 350 MHz, revealing low polarization degrees and significant Faraday rotation, and introduces a new RM synthesis method to analyze low-frequency polarization data.
Contribution
It presents the first detection of diffuse polarized emission from a nearby galaxy below 1 GHz and develops a novel RM synthesis technique to improve low-frequency polarization measurements.
Findings
Diffuse polarization from M31 detected at 350 MHz with 0.21% degree of polarization.
Catalog of 33 polarized sources with Faraday rotation measurements.
Strong depolarization observed, likely within sources or intervening galaxies.
Abstract
Polarization measurements at low radio frequencies allow detection of small Faraday rotation measures caused by regular magnetic fields in galaxies and in the foreground of the Milky Way. The galaxy M31 was observed in two overlapping pointings with the Westerbork Synthesis Radio Telescope (WSRT) resulting in ~4' resolution in total intensity and linearly polarized emission. The frequency range 310-376 MHz was covered by 1024 channels which allowed the application of RM synthesis. We derived a data cube in Faraday depth and compared two symmetric ranges of negative and positive Faraday depths. This new method avoids the range of high instrumental polarization and allows the detection of very low degrees of polarization. For the first time, diffuse polarized emission from a nearby galaxy is detected below 1 GHz. The degree of polarization is only 0.21 +/- 0.05 %, consistent with…
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