Magnetic fields near the peripheries of galactic discs
E. Mikhailov, A. Kasparova, D. Moss, R. Beck, D. Sokoloff, A. Zasov

TL;DR
This study models the generation of magnetic fields in the outer regions of galactic discs, showing they can develop in situ or be transported there, with implications for understanding galactic magnetism.
Contribution
It introduces a simple dynamo model applicable to galactic peripheries, demonstrating magnetic field growth up to 30 kpc over 10 Gyr, considering various gas distribution assumptions.
Findings
Magnetic fields can grow in the outer galactic disc over cosmic timescales.
The magnetic field strength depends weakly on gas distribution parameters.
Magnetic fields may be generated locally or transported from central regions.
Abstract
Magnetic fields are observed beyond the peripheries of optically detected galactic discs, while numerical models of their origin and the typical magnitudes are still absent. Previously, studies of galactic dynamo have avoided considering the peripheries of galactic discs because of the very limited (though gradually growing) knowledge about the local properties of the interstellar medium. Here we investigate the possibility that magnetic fields can be generated in the outskirts of discs, taking the Milky Way as an example. We consider a simple evolving galactic dynamo model in the "no-z" formulation, applicable to peripheral regions of galaxies, for various assumptions about the radial and vertical profiles of the ionized gas disc. The magnetic field may grow as galaxies evolve, even in the more remote parts of the galactic disc, out to radii of 15 to 30 kpc, becoming substantial after…
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