Spectropolarimetry of Galactic stars with anomalous extinction sightlines
Aleksandar Cikota, Thiem Hoang, Stefan Taubenberger, Ferdinando Patat,, Paola Mazzei, Nick L.J. Cox, Paula Zelaya, Stefan Cikota, Lina Tomasella,, Stefano Benetti, Gabriele Rodeghiero

TL;DR
This study investigates the polarization properties of Galactic stars with anomalous extinction sightlines to understand their differences from supernova sightlines, revealing that dust grain composition influences polarization despite similar extinction ratios.
Contribution
The paper provides new spectropolarimetric data and dust modeling showing that Galactic stars with low R_V do not mimic supernova polarization profiles, highlighting the role of large silicate grains.
Findings
Galactic stars with low R_V have normal polarization profiles.
No significant correlation between R_V and λ_max.
Large silicate grains are necessary to reproduce observed polarization curves.
Abstract
Highly reddened type Ia Supernovae (SNe Ia) with low total-to-selective visual extinction ratio values, , also show peculiar linear polarization wavelength dependencies with peak polarizations at short wavelengths (). It is not clear why sightlines to SNe Ia display such different continuum polarization profiles from interstellar sightlines in the Milky Way with similar values. We investigate polarization profiles of a sample of Galactic stars with low values, along anomalous extinction sightlines, with the aim to find similarities to the polarization profiles that we observe in SN Ia sightlines. We undertook spectropolarimetry of 14 stars, and used archival data for three additional stars, and run dust extinction and polarization simulations to infer a simple dust model that can reproduce the observed extinction and polarization…
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