Distortion of Magnetic Fields in a Starless Core V: Near-infrared and Submillimeter Polarization in FeSt 1-457
Ryo Kandori, Tetsuya Nagata, Ryo Tazaki, Motohide Tamura, Masao Saito,, Kohji Tomisaka, Tomoaki Matsumoto, Nobuhiko Kusakabe, Yasushi Nakajima,, Jungmi Kwon, Takahiro Nagayama, and Ken'ichi Tatematsu

TL;DR
This study compares near-infrared and submillimeter polarization in a starless core, revealing different magnetic field structures and dust alignment behaviors at these wavelengths, indicating complex dust and radiation interactions.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed comparison of NIR and submm polarization in a starless core, highlighting differences in dust alignment and magnetic field tracing at different wavelengths.
Findings
NIR polarization traces the magnetic field structure up to A_V ≈ 25 mag.
Submm polarization decreases with increasing A_V, showing a polarization hole.
Different polarization distributions suggest varying radiation environments or dust localization.
Abstract
The relationship between submillimeter (submm) dust emission polarization and near-infrared (NIR) -band polarization produced by dust dichroic extinction was studied for the cold starless dense core FeSt 1-457. The distribution of polarization angles (-rotated for submm) and degrees were found to be very different between at submm and NIR wavelengths. The mean polarization angles for FeSt 1-457 at submm and NIR wavelengths are and , respectively. The correlation between and was found to be linear from outermost regions to relatively dense line of sight of mag, indicating that NIR polarization reflects overall polarization (magnetic field) structure of the core at least in this density range. The flat versus correlations were confirmed, and the polarization…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
