Studying the magnetized ISM with all-sky polarimetric radio maps

Colin Lonsdale, Elena Orlando, Gregg Hallinan, Greg Taylor, Clive Dickinson

    Research output: Other contribution

    Abstract

    Synchrotron radiation from the interstellar medium (ISM) of our galaxy dominates the sky brightness at low radio frequencies, and carries information about relativistic and thermal electron distributions across a range of astrophysical environments. The polarization of the radiation, as modified by Faraday rotation effects in the ISM, also contains extensive information about the magnetic field. Comprehensive all-sky broadband mapping of this radiation, when combined with high frequency radio data, gamma ray data, cosmic ray (CR) measurements and sophisticated modeling, can revolutionize our understanding of the ISM and the processes that influence its evolution. Current widefield imagery of the galactic synchrotron emission is heterogeneous in frequency coverage, sky coverage, angular resolution and calibration accuracy, limiting utility for ISM studies. A new generation of all-digital low frequency array technologies is opening a path to matched resolution, high fidelity polarimetric imaging across a fully sampled swath of radio frequencies from a few tens to many hundreds of MHz, generating a transformational dataset for a broad range of scientific applications.
    Original languageEnglish
    TypeAstro2020 Decadel survey white paper
    Publication statusPublished - 15 Mar 2019

    Keywords

    • astro-ph.GA

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