Faraday moments of the Southern Twenty-centimeter All-sky Polarization Survey (STAPS)
N. Raycheva, M. Haverkorn, S. Ideguchi, J.M. Stil, X. Sun, J.L. Han,, E. Carretti, X.Y. Gao, A. Bracco, S.E. Clark, J.M. Dickey, B.M. Gaensler, A., Hill, T. Landecker, A. Ordog, A. Seta, M. Tahani, M. Wolleben

TL;DR
This study analyzes the magnetic field structure of the southern sky using Faraday tomography from the STAPS survey, revealing polarization features and comparing them with northern sky data to understand the interstellar medium's magnetic properties.
Contribution
First application of Faraday moments to the STAPS survey data, providing new insights into the magnetic field structure of the southern sky and its comparison with northern sky observations.
Findings
Diffuse emission dominates polarized intensity at certain longitudes.
Faraday moments reveal diverse polarization structures.
STAPS frequencies cause depolarization at high latitudes.
Abstract
Faraday tomography of broadband radio polarization surveys enables us to study magnetic fields and their interaction with the interstellar medium (ISM). Such surveys include the Global Magneto-Ionic Medium Survey (GMIMS), which covers the northern and southern hemispheres at 300-1800 MHz. In this work, we used the GMIMS High Band South (1328-1768 MHz), also named the Southern Twenty-centimeter All-sky Polarization Survey (STAPS), which observes the southern sky at a resolution of 18. To extract the key parameters of the magnetized ISM from STAPS, we computed the Faraday moments of the tomographic data cubes. These moments include the total polarized intensity, the mean Faraday depth weighted by the polarized intensity, the weighted dispersion of the Faraday spectrum, and its skewness. We compared the Faraday moments to those calculated over the same frequency range…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHistory and Developments in Astronomy · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Geophysics and Gravity Measurements
