Characterising the Magnetic Fields of Nearby Molecular Clouds using Submillimeter Polarization Observations
Colin H. Sullivan, Laura Fissel, Patrick King, Che-Yu Chen, Zhi-Yun, Li, and Juan Soler

TL;DR
This study characterizes the 3D magnetic field properties of nearby molecular clouds using polarized dust emission data, statistical analysis, and simulations to better understand their influence on star formation.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive analysis combining observational data and simulations to infer magnetic field inclination angles and properties in molecular clouds.
Findings
Range of inclination angles from 16° to 69°
Inverse correlation between polarization fraction and both dispersion and column density
No robust correlation between dispersion and column density
Abstract
Of all the factors that influence star formation, magnetic fields are perhaps the least well understood. The goal of this paper is to characterize the 3D magnetic field properties of nearby molecular clouds through various methods of statistically analysing maps of polarized dust emission. Our study focuses on nine clouds, with data taken from the Planck Sky Survey as well as data from the Balloon-borne Large Aperture Submillimeter Telescope for Polarimetry observations of Vela C. We compare the distributions of polarization fraction (), dispersion in polarization angles (), and hydrogen column density () for each of our targeted clouds. To broaden the scope of our analysis, we compare the distributions of our clouds' polarization observables with measurements from synthetic polarization maps generated from numerical simulations. We also use the distribution…
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