Fast magnetic field amplification in distant galaxyclusters
Gabriella Di Gennaro, Reinout J. van Weeren, Gianfranco Brunetti,, Rossella Cassano, Marcus Br\"uggen, Matthias Hoeft, Timothy W. Shimwell, Huub, J.A. R\"ottgering, Annalisa Bonafede, Andrea Botteon, Virginia Cuciti,, Daniele Dallacasa, Francesco de Gasperin

TL;DR
This paper reports LOFAR observations of distant galaxy clusters revealing diffuse radio emission, indicating rapid magnetic field amplification during early cluster formation, with implications for understanding cosmic magnetic field evolution.
Contribution
It provides the first evidence of strong magnetic fields in high-redshift clusters, suggesting fast amplification mechanisms in early universe conditions.
Findings
Diffuse radio emission detected in distant clusters at high redshift
Magnetic field strengths comparable to nearby clusters
Magnetic field amplification occurs rapidly during early cluster formation
Abstract
In the present-day Universe, magnetic fields pervade galaxy clusters, with strengths of a few microGauss obtained from Faraday Rotation. Evidence for cluster magnetic fields is also provided by Megaparsec-scale radio emission, namely radio halos and relics. These are commonly found in merging systems and are characterized by a steep radio spectrum. It is widely believed that magneto-hydrodynamical turbulence and shock-waves (re-)accelerate cosmic rays, producing halos and relics. The origin and the amplification of magnetic fields in clusters is not well understood. It has been proposed that turbulence drives a small-scaledynamo that amplifies seed magnetic fields (primordial and/or injected by galactic outflows, as active galactic nuclei, starbursts, or winds). At high redshift, radio halos are expected to be faint, due to the Inverse Compton losses and dimming effect with distance.…
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