Probing Magnetic Fields in Protoplanetary Disk Atmospheres through Polarized Optical/IR Light Scattered by Aligned Grains
Haifeng Yang, Zhi-Yun Li

TL;DR
This paper investigates how polarized optical/IR light scattered by aligned grains in protoplanetary disk atmospheres reveals magnetic field structures, including polarization reversals, through synthetic modeling and comparison with observations.
Contribution
It introduces a method to detect magnetic field-induced grain alignment effects in protoplanetary disks using near-IR polarimetry, highlighting polarization reversal as a key signature.
Findings
Polarization can be oriented radially in inclined disks with toroidal magnetic fields.
Aligned grains can cause polarization reversal detectable in near-IR observations.
Existing data features support the presence of aligned non-spherical grains, not spherical ones.
Abstract
Magnetic fields play essential roles in protoplanetary disks. Magnetic fields in the disk atmosphere are of particular interest, as they are connected to the wind-launching mechanism. In this work, we study the polarization of the light scattered off of magnetically aligned grains in the disk atmosphere, focusing on the deviation of the polarization orientation from the canonical azimuthal direction, which may be detectable in near-IR polarimetry with instruments such as VLT/SPHERE. We show with a simple disk model that the polarization can even be oriented along the radial (rather than azimuthal) direction, especially in highly inclined disks with toroidally dominated magnetic fields. This polarization reversal is caused by the anisotropy in the polarizibility of aligned grains and is thus a telltale sign of such grains. We show that the near-IR light is scattered mostly by…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Magnetic and Electromagnetic Effects
