EPoS Contribution
EPoS Contribution
Bow-shaped magnetic morphology surrounding filamentary molecular clouds

Mehrnoosh Tahani
DRAO NRC, Penticton, CA
A new method based on Faraday rotation measurements recently found the line-of-sight component of magnetic fields in Orion-A and showed that their direction changes from the eastern side of this filamentary structure to its western side. Three possible magnetic field morphologies that can explain this reversal across the Orion-A region are toroidal, helical, and bow-shaped morphologies. we constructed simple models to represent these three morphologies and compared them with the available observational data to find the most probable morphology(ies). We used probability values and a Monte Carlo analysis to determine the most likely magnetic field morphology among these three morphologies. We found that the bow morphology had the highest probability values, and that our Monte Carlo analysis suggested that the bow morphology was more likely. We suggest that the bow morphology is the most likely and the most natural of the three morphologies that could explain a magnetic field reversal across the Orion-A filamentary structure (i.e., bow, helical and toroidal morphologies).
Caption: Bow-shaped magnetic fields lines around a filamentary structure
Collaborators:
R. Plume, U Calgary, CA
J.C. Brown, U Calgary, CA
J. Kainulainen, Chalmers U, SE
J. Soler, MPIA, DE
Key publication

Suggested Session: Magnetic Fields