Dust spectrum and polarisation at 850 um in the massive IRDC G035.39-00.33
Mika Juvela (1), Vincent Guillet (2, 3), Tie Liu (4, 5),, Isabelle Ristorcelli (6, 7), Veli-Matti Pelkonen (1), Dana Alina (8),, Leonardo Bronfman (9), David J. Eden (10), Kee Tae Kim (4), Patrick M. Koch, (11), Woojin Kwon (4,12), Chang Won Lee (4,12), Johanna Malinen (13),

TL;DR
This study investigates dust emission and magnetic field structures in the IRDC G035.39-00.33 using multi-wavelength polarisation data, revealing variations in dust properties and magnetic field orientation linked to cloud density.
Contribution
It combines JCMT, Planck, Herschel data, and modelling to analyze dust grain alignment and magnetic fields in a dense star-forming filament, highlighting dust evolution effects.
Findings
Polarisation fraction decreases with increasing column density.
Magnetic field orientation shows clear changes across the filament.
Dust grain alignment likely diminishes at high densities.
Abstract
The dust sub-millimetre polarisation of star-forming clouds carries information on dust and the role of magnetic fields in cloud evolution. With observations of a dense filamentary cloud G035.39-00.33, we aim to characterise the dust emission properties and the variations of the polarisation fraction. JCMT SCUBA-2/POL-2 data at 850um are combined with Planck 850um (353GHz) data to map polarisation fractions. With previous SCUBA-2 observations (450um and 850um) and Herschel data, the column densities are determined via modified blackbody fits and via radiative transfer modelling. Models are constructed to examine how the polarisation angles and fractions depend on potential magnetic field geometries and grain alignment. POL-2 data show clear changes in the magnetic field orientation. The filament has a peak column density of N(H2)~7 10^22 cm-2, a minimum dust temperature of T~12 K, and a…
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