Polarization measurements of hot dust stars and the local interstellar medium
J. P. Marshall, D. V. Cotton, K. Bott, S. Ertel, G. M. Kennedy, M. C., Wyatt, C. del Burgo, O. Absil, J. Bailey, and L. Kedziora-Chudczer

TL;DR
This study used high-precision polarimetry to investigate hot dust stars and the local interstellar medium, finding no polarized scattered light from hot dust but revealing new insights into interstellar polarization characteristics.
Contribution
It provides the first polarimetric measurements of hot dust stars' scattered light and characterizes the local interstellar medium's polarization properties.
Findings
No polarized scattered light detected from hot dust stars.
Wavelength-dependent polarization suggests multiple dust components.
Discovered a region with unusually high interstellar polarization per distance.
Abstract
Debris discs are typically revealed through excess emission at infrared wavelengths. Most discs exhibit excess at mid- and far-infrared wavelengths, analogous to the solar system's Asteroid and Edgeworth-Kuiper belts. Recently, stars with strong (1 per cent) excess at near-infrared wavelengths were identified through interferometric measurements. Using the HIgh Precision Polarimetric Instrument (HIPPI), we examined a sub-sample of these hot dust stars (and appropriate controls) at parts-per-million sensitivity in SDSS g' (green) and r' (red) filters for evidence of scattered light. No detection of strongly polarized emission from the hot dust stars is seen. We therefore rule out scattered light from a normal debris disk as the origin of this emission. A wavelength dependent contribution from multiple dust components for hot dust stars is inferred from the dispersion (difference in…
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