Magnetic field geometry of an unusual cometary cloud Gal 110-13
S. Neha, G. Maheswar, A. Soam, C. W. Lee, A. Tej

TL;DR
This study used optical polarimetry to map the magnetic field of the cometary cloud Gal 110-13, revealing an ordered magnetic field aligned with its shape and suggesting ionization front compression as the cause of its morphology.
Contribution
First optical polarimetric mapping of Gal 110-13's magnetic field, linking magnetic structure to its cometary shape and star formation processes.
Findings
Magnetic field lines are well ordered and aligned with the cloud's structure.
Estimated magnetic field strength is approximately 25 microGauss.
Ionization front compression likely caused the cloud's cometary shape.
Abstract
We carried out optical polarimetry of an isolated cloud, Gal 110-13, to map the plane-of-the-sky magnetic field geometry. The main aim of the study is to understand the most plausible mechanism responsible for the unusual cometary shape of the cloud in the context of its magnetic field geometry. When unpolarized starlight passes through the intervening interstellar dust grains that are aligned with their short axes parallel to the local magnetic field, it gets linearly polarized. The plane-of-the-sky magnetic field component can therefore be traced by doing polarization measurements of background stars projected on clouds. Because the light in the optical wavelength range is most efficiently polarized by the dust grains typically found in the outer layers of the molecular clouds, optical polarimetry enables us to trace the magnetic field geometry of the outer layers of the clouds. We…
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