Magnetic field in a young circumbinary disk
Felipe O. Alves, Josep M. Girart, Marco Padovani, Daniele Galli,, Gabriel A. P. Franco, Paola Caselli, Wouter H. T. Vlemmings, Qizhou Zhang,, Helmut Wiesemeyer

TL;DR
This study uses multi-frequency polarization observations of a young circumbinary disk to determine that magnetic fields, rather than scattering or radiation effects, dominate the polarization pattern.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed polarization analysis of a young circumbinary disk across multiple frequencies, demonstrating the dominance of magnetic fields in polarization.
Findings
Polarization pattern is consistent across all observed bands.
Magnetic field modeling shows poloidal component is about three times stronger than toroidal.
Results strongly suggest magnetic fields, not scattering, cause the observed polarization.
Abstract
We use polarization observations of a circumbinary disk to investigate how the polarization properties change at distinct frequency bands. Our goal is to discern the main mechanism responsible for the polarization through comparison between our observations and model predictions. We used ALMA to perform full polarization observations at 97.5 GHz, 233 GHz and 343.5 GHz. The target is the Class I object BHB07-11, which is the youngest object in the Barnard 59 protocluster. Complementary VLA observations at 34.5 GHz revealed a binary system within the disk. We detect an extended and structured polarization pattern remarkably consistent among all three bands. The distribution of polarized intensity resembles a horseshoe shape with polarization angles following this morphology. From the spectral index between bands 3 and 7, we derive a dust opacity index consistent with…
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