Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/2248/8229
Title: The Origin of Dust Polarization in the Orion Bar
Authors: Gouellec, Valentin J. M. Le
Andersson, B-G
Archana Soam
Schirmer, Thiébaut
Michail, Joseph M.
Lopez-Rodriguez, Enrique
Flores, Sophia
Chuss, David T.
Vaillancourt, John E.
Hoang, Thiem
Lazarian, Alex
Keywords: Interstellar magnetic fields
Interstellar medium
Photodissociation regions
Dust physics
Polarimetry
Issue Date: 10-Jul-2023
Publisher: American Astronomical Society
Citation: The Astrophysical Journal, Vol. 951, No. 2, 97
Abstract: The linear polarization of thermal dust emission provides a powerful tool to probe interstellar and circumstellar magnetic fields, because aspherical grains tend to align themselves with magnetic field lines. While the Radiative Alignment Torque (RAT) mechanism provides a theoretical framework for this phenomenon, some aspects of this alignment mechanism still need to be quantitatively tested. One such aspect is the possibility that the reference alignment direction changes from the magnetic field ("B-RAT") to the radiation field k-vector ("k-RAT") in areas of strong radiation fields. We investigate this transition toward the Orion Bar PDR, using multiwavelength SOFIA HAWC+ dust polarization observations. The polarization angle maps show that the radiation field direction is on average not the preferred grain alignment axis. We constrain the grain sizes for which the transition from B-RAT to k-RAT occurs in the Orion Bar (grains ≥ 0.1 μm toward the most irradiated locations), and explore the radiatively driven rotational disruption that may take place in the high-radiation environment of the Bar for large grains. While the grains susceptible to rotational disruption should be in suprathermal rotation and aligned with the magnetic field, k-RAT aligned grains would rotate at thermal velocities. We find that the grain size at which the alignment shifts from B-RAT to k-RAT corresponds to grains too large to survive the rotational disruption. Therefore, we expect a large fraction of grains to be aligned at suprathermal rotation with the magnetic field, and to potentially be subject to rotational disruption, depending on their tensile strength.
Description: Open Access
Original content from this work may be used under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 licence. Any further distribution of this work must maintain attribution to the author(s) and the title of the work, journal citation and DOI.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/2248/8229
ISSN: 1538-4357
Appears in Collections:IIAP Publications

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