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Probing Interstellar Grain Growth Through Polarimetry in the Taurus Cloud Complex

Authors :
Vaillancourt, John E.
Andersson, B-G
Clemens, Dan P.
Piirola, Vilppu
Hoang, Thiem
Becklin, Eric E.
Caputo, Miranda
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

The optical and near-infrared (OIR) polarization of starlight is typically understood to arise from the dichroic extinction of that light by dust grains whose axes are aligned with respect to a local magnetic-field. The size distribution of the aligned-grain population can be constrained by measurements of the wavelength dependence of the polarization. The leading physical model for producing the alignment is radiative alignment-torques (RAT), which predicts that the most efficiently aligned grains are those with sizes larger than the wavelengths of light composing the local radiation field. Therefore, for a given grain-size distribution, the wavelength at which the polarization reaches a maximum ($\lambda_\mathrm{max}$) should correlate with the characteristic reddening along the line of sight between the dust grains and the illumination source. A correlation between $\lambda_\mathrm{max}$ and reddening has been previously established for extinctions up to $A_V\approx4$ mag. We extend the study of this relationship to a larger sample of stars in the Taurus cloud complex, including extinctions $A_V>10$ mag. We confirm the earlier results for $A_V<4$ mag, but find that the $\lambda_\mathrm{max}$ vs. $A_V$ relationship bifurcates above $A_V\approx4$ mag, with part of the sample continuing the previously observed relationship and the remaining part exhibiting a significantly steeper rise. We propose that the data exhibiting the steep rise represent lines-of-sight towards high density "clumps," where grain coagulation has taken place. We present RAT-based modeling supporting these hypotheses. These results indicate that multi-band OIR polarimetry is a powerful tool for tracing grain growth in molecular clouds, independent of uncertainties in the dust temperature and emissivity.<br />Comment: 25 pages, 7 figures, to be published in ApJ

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2011.00114
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/abc6b0