Balloon-Borne Submillimeter Polarimetry of the Vela C Molecular Cloud: Systematic Dependence of Polarization Fraction on Column Density and Local Polarization-Angle Dispersion
Laura M. Fissel, Peter A. R. Ade, Francesco E. Angil\`e, Peter Ashton,, Steven Benton, Mark J. Devlin, Bradley Dober, Yasuo Fukui, Nicholas Galitzki,, Natalie N. Gandilo, J. R. Klein, Zhi-Yun Li, Andrei L. Korotkov, Peter G., Martin, Tristan G. Matthews, Lorenzo Moncelsi

TL;DR
This study uses balloon-borne submillimeter polarimetry to analyze the Vela C molecular cloud, revealing how polarization fraction depends systematically on column density and polarization-angle dispersion, informing magnetic field structure and star formation models.
Contribution
It introduces an empirical power-law model describing the polarization fraction's dependence on column density and polarization-angle dispersion in Vela C.
Findings
Polarization fraction decreases with increasing polarization-angle dispersion.
No significant correlation between column density and polarization-angle dispersion.
Empirical model fits observed polarization behavior across the cloud.
Abstract
We present results for Vela C obtained during the 2012 flight of the Balloon-borne Large Aperture Submillimeter Telescope for Polarimetry (BLASTPol). We mapped polarized intensity across almost the entire extent of this giant molecular cloud, in bands centered at 250, 350, and 500 {\mu}m. In this initial paper, we show our 500 {\mu}m data smoothed to a resolution of 2.5 arcminutes (approximately 0.5 pc). We show that the mean level of the fractional polarization p and most of its spatial variations can be accounted for using an empirical three-parameter power-law fit, p = p_0 N^(-0.4) S^(-0.6), where N is the hydrogen column density and S is the polarization-angle dispersion on 0.5 pc scales. The decrease of p with increasing S is expected because changes in the magnetic field direction within the cloud volume sampled by each measurement will lead to cancellation of polarization…
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