Evidence for Line-of-Sight Frequency Decorrelation of Polarized Dust Emission in $Planck$ Data
V. Pelgrims, S. E. Clark, B. S. Hensley, G. V. Panopoulou, V., Pavlidou, K. Tassis, H.K. Eriksen, I. K. Wehus

TL;DR
This paper presents the first evidence of line-of-sight frequency decorrelation in polarized dust emission using Planck data, highlighting its dependence on magnetic field alignment and implications for CMB polarization analysis.
Contribution
It provides the first observational evidence of LOS frequency decorrelation in polarized dust emission and demonstrates its dependence on magnetic field misalignment.
Findings
LOS frequency decorrelation is statistically significant in Planck data.
The effect is stronger in sightlines with more misaligned magnetic fields.
An intrinsic 15% variation in polarized emission ratio can explain the observed decorrelation.
Abstract
If a single line of sight (LOS) intercepts multiple dust clouds of different spectral energy distributions and magnetic field orientations, the frequency scaling of each of the Stokes and parameters of thermal dust emission may be different ("LOS frequency decorrelation"). We present first evidence for LOS frequency decorrelation in data. We use independent, neutral-hydrogen--measurements of the number of clouds per LOS and the magnetic field orientation in each cloud to select two sets of sightlines: (i) a target sample (pixels likely to exhibit LOS frequency decorrelation); (ii) a control sample (pixels lacking complex LOS structure). We test the null hypothesis that LOS frequency decorrelation is not detectable in 353 and 217~GHz polarization data at high Galactic latitudes. The data reject this hypothesis at high significance. The detection is robust…
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