The magnetized galactic wind and synchrotron halo of the starburst dwarf galaxy IC10
Krzysztof T. Chyzy, Robert T. Drzazga, Rainer Beck, Marek Urbanik,, Volker Heesen, Dominik J. Bomans

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that the starburst dwarf galaxy IC10 generates strong magnetic fields and drives magnetized galactic winds, creating an extensive radio halo and potentially seeding the intergalactic medium with magnetic fields.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed radio polarimetry analysis of IC10, revealing magnetic field structures and outflow dynamics in a low-mass starburst dwarf galaxy.
Findings
IC10 has an extensive, magnetized radio halo extending beyond its disk.
The magnetic field reaches up to 29 microG in HII regions.
Galactic winds in IC10 can carry magnetic fields into the IGM.
Abstract
We aim to explore whether strong magnetic fields can be effectively generated in low-mass dwarf galaxies and, if so, whether such fields can be affected by galactic outflows and spread out into the intergalactic medium (IGM). We performed a radio continuum polarimetry study of IC10, the nearest starbursting dwarf galaxy, using a combination of multifrequency interferometric (VLA) and single-dish (Effelsberg) observations. VLA observations at 1.43 GHz reveal an extensive and almost spherical radio halo of IC10 in total intensity, extending twice more than the infrared-emitting galactic disk. The halo is magnetized with a magnetic field strength of 7 microG in the outermost parts. Locally, the magnetic field reaches about 29 microG in HII complexes, becomes more ordered, and weakens to 22 microG in the synchrotron superbubble and to 7-10 microG within HI holes. At the higher frequency of…
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