Synthetic observations of spiral arm tracers of a simulated Milky Way analog
Stefan Reissl, Jeroen M. Stil, En Chen, Robin G. Tre{\ss}, Mattia C., Sormani, Rowan J. Smith, Ralf S. Klessen, Megan Buick, Simon C. O. Glover,, Russell Shanahan, Stephen J. Lemmer, Juan D. Soler, Henrik Beuther, James S., Urquhart, L.D. Anderson, Karl M. Menten

TL;DR
This study uses MHD simulations and radiative transfer to analyze how spiral arms influence Faraday rotation measures in a Milky Way-like galaxy, revealing that spiral arm compression amplifies RM and creates characteristic patterns.
Contribution
It demonstrates how shock compression in spiral arms enhances RM and reproduces observed RM features using synthetic observations from a detailed MHD simulation.
Findings
Spiral arms increase RM by a few hundred rad/m^2 due to magnetic field amplification.
RM contrast between arm and inter-arm regions is about 10 in the inner Galaxy.
Synthetic data shows a shark-fin pattern in RM similar to observations.
Abstract
Context: The Faraday rotation measure (RM) is often used to study the magnetic field strength and orientation within the ionized medium of the Milky Way. Observations indicate a RM in the spiral arms that exceeds the commonly assumed range. This raises the question of under what conditions spiral arms create such strong RM. Aims: We investigate the effect of spiral arms on Galactic RMs through shock compression of the interstellar medium (ISM). It has recently been suggested that the Sagittarius spiral arm creates a strong peak in RM where the line of sight (LOS) is tangent to the arm, and that enhanced RM follows along an intersecting LOS. We seek to understand the physical conditions that give rise to this effect and the role of viewing geometry. Methods: We apply a MHD simulation of the multi-phase ISM in a Milky Way type spiral galaxy disk in combination with radiative transfer to…
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