“We discovered the so far
largest ordered magnetic fields in the universe, extending over 5-6 million light
years”, says Maja Kierdorf from Max Planck Institute Bonn. Astronomers from
Bonn and Tautenburg in Thuringia (Germany) used the 100-m radio telescope at
Effelsberg to observe several galaxy clusters and were successful in getting this
extraordinary data.
At the edges of these large
accumulations of dark matter, stellar systems (galaxies), hot gas, and charged
particles, they found magnetic fields that are exceptionally ordered over
distances of many million light years. This makes them the most extended
magnetic fields in the universe known so far.
The relic shown below at the outskirts of the
galaxy cluster CIZA J2242+53, named „Sausage“ because of its shape, is located
at a distance of about two billion light years from us. The contour lines show
the intensity of the radio emission at a wavelength of 3 cm, observed with the
100-m Effelsberg radio telescope. The colors represent the distribution of
linearly polarized radio intensity at the chosen wavelength, in units of
Milli-Jansky per telescope beam. The short dashes indicate the orientation of
the magnetic field.
The bright source at the
bottom is a radio galaxy that belongs to the same galaxy cluster. Galaxy clusters are the
largest gravitationally bound structures in the universe. With a typical extent
of about 10 million light years, i.e. 100 times the diameter of the Milky Way,
they host a large number of such stellar systems, along with hot gas, magnetic
fields, charged particles, embedded in large haloes of dark matter, the
composition of which is unknown.
Collision of galaxy clusters
leads to a shock compression of the hot cluster gas and of the magnetic fields.
The resulting arc-like features are called “relics” and stand out by their
radio and X-ray emission. Since their discovery in 1970 with a radio telescope
near Cambridge/UK, relics were found in about 70 galaxy clusters so far, but
many more are likely to exist. They are messengers of huge gas flows that continuously
shape the structure of the universe.
Radio waves are excellent tracers of relics. The
compression of magnetic fields orders the field lines, which also affects the
emitted radio waves. More precisely, the emission becomes linearly polarized.
This effect was detected in four galaxy clusters by a team of researchers at
the Max Planck Institute for Radio Astronomy in Bonn (MPIfR), the Argelander
Institute for Radio Astronomy at the University of Bonn (AIfA), the Thuringia
State Observatory at Tautenburg (TLS), and colleagues in Cambridge/USA.
They used the MPIfR’s 100-m
radio telescope near Bad Münstereifel-Effelsberg in the Eifel hills at
wavelengths of 3 cm and 6 cm. Such short wavelengths are advantageous because
the polarized emission is not diminished when passing through the galaxy
cluster and our Milky Way. Fig.1 shows the most spectacular case.
Linearly polarized relics
were found in the four galaxy clusters observed, in one case for the first
time. The magnetic fields are of similar strength as in our Milky Way, while
the measured degrees of polarization of up to 50% are exceptionally high,
indicating that the emission originates in an extremely ordered magnetic field.
For this project, co-author
Matthias Hoeft from TLS Tautenburg developed a method that permits to determine
the “Mach number”, i.e. the ratio of the relative velocity between the
colliding gas clouds and the local sound speed, using the observed degree of
polarization. The resulting Mach numbers of about two tell us that the galaxy
clusters collide with velocities of about 2000 km/s, which is faster than
previously derived from measurements of the X-ray emission.
The new Effelsberg telescope
observations show that the polarization plane of the radio emission from the
relics turns with wavelength. This “Faraday rotation effect”, named after the
English physicist Michael Faraday, indicates that ordered magnetic fields also
exist between the clusters and, together with hot gas, cause the rotation of
the polarization plane. Such magnetic fields may be even larger than the
clusters themselves.
The Effelsberg radio
telescope proved again to be an ideal instrument to detect magnetic fields in
the universe“, emphasizes co-author Rainer Beck from MPIfR who works on this
topic for more than 40 years. “Now we can systematically search for ordered
magnetic fields in galaxy clusters using polarized radio waves.”
Via Dailygalaxy
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