The Astrophysical Journal (Jan 2024)

Polarized Light from Massive Protoclusters (POLIMAP). I. Dissecting the Role of Magnetic Fields in the Massive Infrared Dark Cloud G28.37+0.07

  • Chi-Yan Law,
  • Jonathan C. Tan,
  • Raphael Skalidis,
  • Larry Morgan,
  • Duo Xu,
  • Felipe de Oliveira Alves,
  • Ashley T. Barnes,
  • Natalie Butterfield,
  • Paola Caselli,
  • Giuliana Cosentino,
  • Francesco Fontani,
  • Jonathan D. Henshaw,
  • Izaskun Jimenez-Serra,
  • Wanggi Lim

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/ad39e0
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 967, no. 2
p. 157

Abstract

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Magnetic fields may play a crucial role in setting the initial conditions of massive star and star cluster formation. To investigate this, we report SOFIA-HAWC+ 214 μ m observations of polarized thermal dust emission and high-resolution GBT-Argus C ^18 O(1-0) observations toward the massive Infrared Dark Cloud (IRDC) G28.37+0.07. Considering the local dispersion of B -field orientations, we produce a map of the B -field strength of the IRDC, which exhibits values between ∼0.03 and 1 mG based on a refined Davis–Chandrasekhar–Fermi method proposed by Skalidis & Tassis. Comparing to a map of inferred density, the IRDC exhibits a B – n relation with a power-law index of 0.51 ± 0.02, which is consistent with a scenario of magnetically regulated anisotropic collapse. Consideration of the mass-to-flux ratio map indicates that magnetic fields are dynamically important in most regions of the IRDC. A virial analysis of a sample of massive, dense cores in the IRDC, including evaluation of magnetic and kinetic internal and surface terms, indicates consistency with virial equilibrium, sub-Alfvénic conditions, and a dominant role for B -fields in regulating collapse. A clear alignment of magnetic field morphology with the direction of the steepest column density gradient is also detected. However, there is no preferred orientation of protostellar outflow directions with the B -field. Overall, these results indicate that magnetic fields play a crucial role in regulating massive star and star cluster formation, and therefore they need to be accounted for in theoretical models of these processes.

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