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LOFAR and the Magnetism Key Science Project Ger de Bruyn on behalf of the MKSP ASTRON & Kapteyn Institute. E-LOFAR meeting, Hamburg, 16-19 Sept 2008. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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LOFAR and the Magnetism Key Science Project
Ger de Bruyn
on behalf of the MKSP
ASTRON & Kapteyn Institute
E-LOFAR meeting, Hamburg, 16-19 Sept 2008
Still young KSP (April 2006 kickoff)
Project plan May 2007 (before rescope)
Meetings in Bonn (3x), Leiden and Dwingeloo (June 08):
about 20 - 25 people interestedMembership issue on tomorrows agenda
Management team: Rainer Beck, Wolfgang Reich, Ger de Bruyn
Working groups formed and Use Cases collected (James Anderson) Interested in contributing or want to know more? Come to our MKSP meeting tomorrow morning. Meeting agenda follows this afternoon (?)
Organization and membership
Outline
— What is interesting about magnetic fields ?
— Methods to study them?
— Overview of current MKSP science themes
— Magnetic fields and radio polarization
— Low-frequency radio polarimetry : a difficult but exciting partnership
— RM-synthesis: the why and how. Faraday thin please !
— Some examples (appetizers) of ‘low’ frequency polarimetry
— Conclusions
The Universe is one big plasma and magnetic fields are responsible for shapingthe objects within (e.g. Sun, pulsars, Galaxies, radio sources,...).Understanding observed phenomena is hardly possible without understanding themagnetic field, indeed the magnetic energy density is often a dominant component.
So what do we still want to know about them?
— How extended are galactic magnetic fields ?— Are they strong enough to affect the dynamics in outer galaxies (halos, winds,
interactions, general rotation) ?— What can they tell us about the history of a galaxy ?— Are they connected to intergalactic space ?— What is their origin (primordial, dynamo, MRI) ?
Open questions about magnetic fields
Methods to study magnetic fields (strength, topology)
— Nonthermal radio emission - polarization studies - equipartition arguments (synchrotron/IC losses, z-dependent) - Galactic tomography (via absorption)— Faraday rotation: both a nuisance and a great diagnostic - RM - Faraday spectra (in mixed emitting/rotating media) — Pulsars (ratio RM/DM yields B)— UHECR (from ‘nearby’ AGN) and IGM propagation
— Zeeman effect (HI, molecules) — Optical scattering (aligned dustgrains)
Overview of scientific themes in Magnetism KSP
— Solar system (IPM)— Stellar jets— Our Galaxy (SNR, GMC, ……)— Galactic foreground (…EoR nuisance)— Disk and haloes of spiral Galaxies— Dwarf galaxies— AGN and giant radio galaxies (e.g. DDRG)— Clusters , LSS and Cosmic Web
— anything that is polarized ….
Overlap and synergy with other KSPs
— EoR: Galactic foreground and ionospheric Faraday rotation
— SRV: Nearby galaxies, clusters , AGN, RG’s
— TRA: Transients often (circularly) polarized, e.g. ET’s TV
— SSW: Interplanetary magnetic field
How to take the interests and contributions from all groups into account is going to take quite some interaction !
Interstellar and ionospheric (time-variable) Faraday rotation
= o + RM.2 where RM ne. B|| dl
Propagation and instrumentation lead to various depolarization effects:
beam need longer baselines (WSRT 3 km, LOFAR ~ 100 - 1000 km)
depth multiple layers along line of sight
bandwidth decoherence use multi-channel backends, but then S/N issue !
Powerful new tool to combat at least the latter two effects is
RM Synthesis
Low frequency polarimetry aspects
RM synthesis Brentjens and de Bruyn (2005)
1) Linear polarization vector: P = Q + iU = p I e 2i
where I, Q, U (V) are the Stokes parameters, p = % polarization, and = 0.5 atan(U/Q) is the polarization angle
2) When observing the polarized power P at a range of 2 we can define:
P(2) = W(2) F() exp(2i2) d
where F() is the complex polarized power per unit Faraday depth first defined by Burn (1966), and W(2) is the window function of the instrument
3) This relation can be Fourier inverted to yield F()
The derived quantity F(), also called the Faraday depth spectrum, is convolved with a response function, the RMSF, which gives the resolution in RM-space. In complex situations, deconvolution is still required. Note that the RMSF is the FT of the window function W(2) in 2 space.
The output of RM synthesis is a cube of (Q,U) images
in ‘Faraday depth’ space.
Current WSRT RMSF’s and sidelobes
311 - 381 MHz (~ 1m)
RMSF halfwidth ~ 11 rad/m2
138 - 157 MHz (~ 2m)
RMSF halfwidth ~ 3 rad/m2
Exquisite RMSF’s at LOFAR - frequencies !
115 - 185 MHz 35 - 75 MHz halfwidth ~ 1.0 rad/m2 halfwidth ~ 0.05 rad/m2
The plane of polarization rotates by: = 2 RM. (/3)
This angle can be measured to an accuracy: ~ 1/2*SNR
Where the Signal-to-Noise-Ratio equals: SNR ~ (S/SEFD) *(.t)0.5
Assume that we are dealing with steep spectra: S -1±0.5
The accuracy in the measurement of RM then becomes:
RM 2.5±0.5 . (/)-1.5 . SEFD
Hence LOFAR ~ 100-1000 x better at 150 MHz than VLA/WSRT at 1500 MHz !!
The relative bandwidth / and the SEFD (Jy) are similar for modern arrays:
e.g. LOFAR: 30/150 MHz , 20 Jy VLA/WSRT: 300/1500 MHz , 15-25 Jy
Fantastic RM-accuracy at LOFAR frequencies !
Polarized radiation transfer in a ‘Burn-slab’
A uniform mixed ‘slab’ of nonthermal emitting and thermal Faraday rotating plasma produces a sinc-like response in the observed P(2) response.
There is a null in our polarized signal if: RM . 2 = n radians (n=1,2,3 …)
If RM. 2 >> 1 the medium is called ‘Faraday thick’.
But note that a polarized background source can still be seen through it, i.e. Faraday depth optical depth
and, because B|| is sign-sensitive, Faraday depth physical depth
thermal
nonthermal
Burn slabs & Faraday depth: ‘depth depolarization’A ‘back-to-front’ Faraday depth of 60 rad/m2 at 21cm (L-band) willsignificantly depolarize signals. This happens in some spiralgalaxies (NGC6946, shown later)
In the LOFAR HBA-band evena Faraday depth of only 2 rad/m2 will almost completelyquench the polarized signals !
Hence to see linear polarizationat < 200 MHz requires extremelyFaraday thin emission regions
Milky Way: distribution of cosmic-ray electronsUse tomographic techniques via absorption/emission
Full-sky ‘high-freq’ polarized images of our Galaxy
22.8 GHz WMAP image
1.4 GHz Reich et al
(more sensitive, but serious depolarization effects already become visible)
WSRT 325 MHz polarisation in our Galaxy’s 2d quadrant
Schnitzeler et al (2007)
Haverkorn et al (2003)
Still very strong polarised signals !
WSRT LFFE observations of the FAN area
• Target location (J2000): 03h10m +65.5o
• 6x12h (9A=36,48,60,72,84,96m) in Nov/Dec 2007 (nighttime)
• Field of View ~ 6o HPBW, but all sky imaging needed
• 8 adjacent bands of 2.5 MHz from 138 -157 MHz • each band has 512 spectral channels• 10s integration time• 400 GByte raw data
• Reduction/processing in AIPS++ Gianni Bernardi et al,
poster
Polarised intensity distributions in/around ‘the ring’
RM = - 5 rad/m2 RM = - 2 rad/m2
No good model as yet beyond: ‘ionised magnetized bubble …..’
But there is more info see e.g. Q and U images
Note the very large polarization angle gradients at the edge of ‘the ring’
Calibration challenges (but not only for the MKSP !)
— Faraday rotation by the ionosphere (rather mild now at 150 MHz)— Instrumental polarized beams, time/position variable— Automate polarization calibration ? Polarization typically <5% , rather than 10 - 50% at 6-21cm ! interactive processing needed store uv-data for accurate calibration !
— Analysis of 3-D RM-cubes and use in calibration major cycle !— Daytime versus nighttime ! — LBA polarization (< 50 MHz) very tough !
— and, Solar Max coming soon
VLA/Effelsberg data VLA/Effelsberg data
POLINT 6cm POLINT 20cmPOLINT 6cm POLINT 20cm
Galaxies get bigger at low frequencies but start to Faraday depolarize Galaxies get bigger at low frequencies but start to Faraday depolarize at 20cm (Faraday depth ~ 60 rad/mat 20cm (Faraday depth ~ 60 rad/m22))
NGC6946 polarization studies Beck, 2007
NGC 6946 Faraday rotation gradient/structure
WSRT data 18+21cm Heald et al, in prep
Interarm regoins have about 3 mJy/30” beam of polarized emission at 150 MHz IF not Faraday-thick and no beam-depolarization
Modification of background emission by Faraday rotation in a foreground galaxy (Fomalont et al. 1989)
Extragalactic Faraday screens
NGC 1310 NGC 1310 against against Fornax AFornax A
Intergalactic magnetic fields? Last frontier …
— Use high redshift radio sources (Kronberg e tal, 2008) (relation to MgII absorbers at z=1-2 ?).
— Use giant radio sources ( > ~ 1 Mpc)
— Image cosmic web and LSS, e.g. around clusters
— Use DoA and (an-)isotropy of UHECR
The radio galaxy B1834+62Schoenmakers et al (2000)z = 0.54, 1.2 Mpc size !
all 4 lobes polarizedRM = 56 - 60 rad/m2
(Lack of) depolarization in lobes of B1834+62 WSRT project on low freq polarization in giants with Tigran Arshakian et al(searching a.o. for LOFAR polarization calibrators)
Inner lobes depolarize at 350 MHz.Outer lobes still at 13% polarization. Data at 115-165 MHz in hand ….
very little internal gas in outer lobes but worries about beam depolarization LOFAR
What is origin of RM difference of 3 rad/m2 between outer lobes ?Either due to:- our Galaxy (gradients ?)
- cocoons of lobes (rather high ne, B needed)
- variations in true IGM on scales of ~ 1 Mpc ?
RM ~3 rad/m2 ~ 10-6 x 0.1 G x 30 Mpc (filaments of cosmic web ?)
Conclusions
Science applications:
— To study/use polarization we need Faraday thin regions extreme conditions in plasma ! — There is still Galactic polarization left at 2m wavelength— In nearby galaxies: interarm regions and/or halo are best targets — Extragalactic RM and IGM magnetic field : avoid beam depolar.!— RM synthesis a powerful/essential tool — Complicated distribution functions likely (both Faraday thin/thick)
Many instrumental challenges ahead: some fundamental and some in processing
Probably need to save uv-data (certainly initially) reprocessing storage + cluster needed
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