An Empirical Relation Between The Large-Scale Magnetic Field And The Dynamical Mass In Galaxies
F. S. Tabatabaei, T. P. K. Martinsson, J. H. Knapen, J. E. Beckman, B., Koribalski, B. G. Elmegreen

TL;DR
This study reveals a strong correlation between large-scale magnetic fields and the dynamical mass in galaxies, suggesting magnetic field strength increases with galaxy mass and rotation speed, challenging traditional dynamo theories.
Contribution
It provides empirical evidence linking magnetic field strength to galaxy mass and rotation, highlighting a coupling not explained by standard dynamo models.
Findings
Magnetic field strength correlates with galaxy rotation speed.
A coupling between magnetic fields and galaxy mass is observed.
Turbulent magnetic fields dominate in fast rotating galaxies.
Abstract
The origin and evolution of cosmic magnetic fields as well as the influence of the magnetic fields on the evolution of galaxies are unknown. Though not without challenges, the dynamo theory can explain the large-scale coherent magnetic fields which govern galaxies, but observational evidence for the theory is so far very scarce. Putting together the available data of non-interacting, non-cluster galaxies with known large-scale magnetic fields, we find a tight correlation between the integrated polarized flux density, S(PI), and the rotation speed, v(rot), of galaxies. This leads to an almost linear correlation between the large-scale magnetic field B and v(rot), assuming that the number of cosmic ray electrons is proportional to the star formation rate, and a super-linear correlation assuming equipartition between magnetic fields and cosmic rays. This correlation cannot be attributed to…
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