Publication | Open Access
Theoretical Models of Polarized Dust Emission from Protostellar Cores
146
Citations
34
References
2001
Year
We model the polarized thermal dust emission from protostellar cores that are assembled by super-sonic turbulent flows in molecular clouds. Self-gravitating cores are selected from a three dimensional simulation of super-sonic and super-Alfvenic magneto-hydrodynamic (MHD) turbulence. The polarization is computed in two ways. In model A it is assumed that dust properties and grain alignment efficiency are uniform; in model B it is assumed that grains are not aligned at visual extinction larger than 3 mag. The main results of this work are: i) Values of the degree of polarization P between 1 and 10% are typical, despite the super-Alfvenic nature of the turbulence; ii) A steep decrease of P with increasing values of the sub-mm dust continuum intensity I is always found in self--gravitating cores selected from the MHD simulations, if grains are not aligned above a certain value of visual extinction (model B); iii) The same behavior is hard to reproduce if grains are aligned independently of visual extinction (model A); iv) The Chandrasekhar-Fermi formula, corrected by a factor f=0.4, provides an approximate estimate of the average magnetic field strength in the cores. Sub-mm dust continuum polarization maps of quiescent protostellar cores and Bok globules always show a decrease in P with increasing value of I consistent with the predictions of our model B. We therefore conclude that sub-mm polarization maps of quiescent cores do not map the magnetic field inside the cores at visual extinction larger than approximately 3 mag. There is no inconsistency between the results from optical and near-IR polarized absorption of background stars, and the observed polarization of sub-mm dust continuum from quiescent cores. In both cases, grains at large visual extinction appear to be virtually unaligned.
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