Measuring magnetism in the Milky Way with the Square Kilometre Array
Marijke Haverkorn, Takuya Akahori, Ettore Carretti, Katia Ferriere,, Peter Frick, Bryan Gaensler, George Heald, Melanie Johnston-Hollitt, David, Jones, Tom Landecker, Sui Ann Mao, Aris Noutsos, Niels Oppermann, Wolfgang, Reich, Timothy Robishaw, Anna Scaife, Dominic Schnitzeler

TL;DR
The paper discusses how the Square Kilometre Array (SKA) will significantly advance the understanding of magnetic fields in the Milky Way, revealing their 3D structure, turbulence, and role in Galactic processes.
Contribution
It highlights the potential of SKA to map magnetic fields across various Galactic scales and objects, resolving existing debates and expanding measurement samples.
Findings
Global spiral magnetic field with turbulence identified
Magnetic field structures in supernova remnants and jets will be better understood
Galactic magnetic field reversals will be clarified
Abstract
Magnetic fields in the Milky Way are present on a wide variety of sizes and strengths, influencing many processes in the Galactic ecosystem such as star formation, gas dynamics, jets, and evolution of supernova remnants or pulsar wind nebulae. Observation methods are complex and indirect; the most used of these are a grid of rotation measures of unresolved polarized extragalactic sources, and broadband polarimetry of diffuse emission. Current studies of magnetic fields in the Milky Way reveal a global spiral magnetic field with a significant turbulent component; the limited sample of magnetic field measurements in discrete objects such as supernova remnants and HII regions shows a wide variety in field configurations; a few detections of magnetic fields in Young Stellar Object jets have been published; and the magnetic field structure in the Galactic Center is still under debate. The…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies
