Combined radio/optical image of galaxy IC
342, using data from both the VLA and the Effelsberg telescope. Lines
indicate the orientation of magnetic fields in the galaxy.
Credit: R. Beck, MPIfR; NRAO/AUI/NSF;
graphics: U. Klein, AIfA; Background image: T.A. Rector, University of
Alaska Anchorage and H. Schweiker, WIYN; NOAO/AURA/NSF
Astronomers making a detailed,
multi-telescope study of a nearby galaxy have discovered a magnetic
field coiled around the galaxy's main spiral arm. The discovery, they
said, helps explain how galactic spiral arms are formed. The same study
also shows how gas can be funneled inward toward the galaxy's center,
which possibly hosts a black hole.
'This study helps resolve some major questions about how galaxies
form and evolve,' said Rainer Beck, of the Max-Planck Institute for
Radio Astronomy (MPIfR), in Bonn, Germany.
The scientists studied a galaxy called IC 342, some 10 million
light-years from Earth, using the National Science Foundation's Karl G.
Jansky Very Large Array (VLA), and the MPIfR's 100-meter Effelsberg
radio telescope in Germany. Data from both radio telescopes were merged
to reveal the magnetic structures of the galaxy.
The surprising result showed a huge, helically-twisted loop coiled
around the galaxy's main spiral arm. Such a feature, never before seen
in a galaxy, is strong enough to affect the flow of gas around the
spiral arm.
'Spiral arms can hardly be formed by gravitational forces alone,'
Beck said. 'This new IC 342 image indicates that magnetic fields also
play an important role in forming spiral arms.'
The new observations provided clues to another aspect of the galaxy, a
bright central region that may host a black hole and also is
prolifically producing new stars. To maintain the high rate of star
production requires a steady inflow of gas from the galaxy's outer
regions into its center.
'The magnetic field lines at the inner part of the galaxy point
toward the galaxy's center, and would support an inward flow of gas,'
Beck said.
The scientists mapped the galaxy's magnetic-field structures by
measuring the orientation, or polarization, of the radio waves emitted
by the galaxy. The orientation of the radio waves is perpendicular to
that of the magnetic field. Observations at several wavelengths made it
possible to correct for rotation of the waves' polarization plane caused
by their passage through interstellar magnetic fields along the line of
sight to Earth.
The Effelsberg telescope, with its wide field of view, showed the
full extent of IC 342, which, if not partially obscured to visible-light
observing by dust clouds within our own Milky Way Galaxy, would appear
as large as the full moon in the sky. The high resolution of the VLA, on
the other hand, revealed the finer details of the galaxy. The final
image, showing the magnetic field, was produced by combining five VLA
images made with 24 hours of observing time, along with 30 hours of data
from Effelsberg.
Scientists from MPIfR, including Beck were the first to detect
polarized radio emission in galaxies, starting with Effelsberg
observations of the Andromeda Galaxy in 1978. Another MPIfR scientist,
Marita Krause, made the first such detection with the VLA in 1989, with
observations that included IC 342, which is the third-closest spiral
galaxy to Earth, after the Andromeda Galaxy (M31) and the Triangulum
Galaxy (M33).
Beck reported the results of the research in the journal Astronomy & Astrophysics.
The National Radio Astronomy Observatory is a facility of the
National Science Foundation, operated under cooperative agreement by
Associated Universities, Inc.
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