Journal article icon

Journal article

Probing magnetic fields in the circumgalactic medium using polarization data from MIGHTEE

Abstract:
Context. The properties and evolution of magnetic fields surrounding galaxies are observationally largely unconstrained. The detection and study of these magnetic fields is important to understand galaxy evolution since magnetic fields are tracers for dynamical processes in the circumgalactic medium (CGM) and can have a significant impact on the evolution of the CGM.
Aims. The Faraday rotation measure (RM) of the polarized light of background radio sources passing through the magnetized CGM of intervening galaxies can be used as a tracer for the strength and extent of magnetic fields around galaxies.
Methods. We used rotation measures observed by the MIGHTEE-POL (MeerKAT International GHz Tiered Extragalactic Exploration polarization) survey by MeerKAT in the XMM-LSS and COSMOS fields to investigate the RM around foreground star-forming galaxies. We used spectroscopic catalogs of star-forming and blue cloud galaxies to measure the RM of MIGHTEE-POL sources as a function of the impact parameter from the intervening galaxy. In addition, we examined the dependence of the RM on redshift. We then repeated this procedure using a deeper galaxy catalog with photometric redshifts.
Results. For the spectroscopic star-forming sample, we find a redshift-corrected |RM| excess of 5.6 ± 2.3 rad m−2 which corresponds to a 2.5σ significance around galaxies with a median redshift of z = 0.46 for impact parameters below 130 kpc only selecting the intervenor with the smallest impact parameter. Making use of a photometric galaxy catalog and taking into account all intervenors with Mg < −13.6 mag, the signal disappears. We find no indication for a correlation between redshift and RM, nor do we find a connection between the total number of intervenors to the total |RM|.
Conclusions. We have presented tentative evidence that the CGM of star-forming galaxies is permeated by coherent magnetic fields within the virial radius. We conclude that mostly bright, star-forming galaxies with impact parameters less than 130 kpc significantly contribute to the RM of the background radio source.
Publication status:
Published
Peer review status:
Peer reviewed

Actions


Access Document


Files:
Publisher copy:
10.1051/0004-6361/202346777

Authors



Publisher:
EDP Sciences
Journal:
Astronomy and Astrophysics More from this journal
Volume:
678
Article number:
A56
Publication date:
2023-10-05
Acceptance date:
2023-08-29
DOI:
EISSN:
1432-0746
ISSN:
0004-6361


Language:
English
Keywords:
Pubs id:
1553558
Local pid:
pubs:1553558
Deposit date:
2024-03-15

Terms of use



Views and Downloads






If you are the owner of this record, you can report an update to it here: Report update to this record

TO TOP