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Scientists discover huge magnetic toroids in the halo of the Milky Way

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The magnetic fields in the Milky Way’s halo have a toroidal structure extending from 6,000 light-years to 50,000 light-years from the galactic center. The Sun is about 30,000 light years away. Credit: NAOC

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The magnetic fields in the Milky Way’s halo have a toroidal structure extending from 6,000 light-years to 50,000 light-years from the galactic center. The Sun is about 30,000 light years away. Credit: NAOC

The origin and evolution of cosmic magnetic fields is a long-standing open question at the frontier of astronomical and astrophysical research and has been chosen as one of the key research areas for many large world-class radio telescopes, including the Square Kilometer Array (SKA) under construction. Determining the large-scale structures of the magnetic field in the Milky Way has been a major challenge for many astronomers around the world for decades.

In a new study published in The Astrophysical Journal on May 10, Dr. Xu Jun and Prof. Han Jinlin of the National Astronomical Observatories of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (NAOC) discovered huge magnetic toroids in the Milky Way’s halo, which are fundamental to the propagation of cosmic rays and provide a crucial constraint on physical processes in the interstellar medium and the origin of cosmic magnetic fields.

Prof. Han, a leading scientist in this research area, has determined the magnetic field structures along the spiral arms of the galactic disk through a long-term project to measure the polarization of pulsars and their Faraday effects.

In 1997 he discovered a striking antisymmetry of the Faraday effects of cosmic radio sources in the sky with respect to the coordinates of our Milky Way galaxy, indicating that the magnetic fields in the Milky Way halo have a toroidal field structure, with reversed magnetic field directions below and above the galactic plane.

However, determining the size of these toroids or the strength of their magnetic fields has been a difficult task for astronomers for decades.

They suspected that the antisymmetry of the sky distribution of the Faraday effects of radio sources could only be produced by the interstellar medium near the Sun, since pulsars and some nearby radio-emitting objects that are quite close to the Sun show Faraday Effects corresponding to the antisymmetry.

The key is to show whether the magnetic fields in the vast galactic halo had such a toroidal structure outside the vicinity of the sun.

In this study, Prof. Hahn innovatively proposed that the Faraday rotation of the interstellar medium near the Sun could be counted through the measurements of a large number of pulsars, some of which were obtained recently by the Five Hundred Aperture Spherical Radio Telescope (FAST) alone, and then could to subtract the contribution from measurements of background cosmic sources.

All Faraday rotation measurement data over the past 30 years has been collected by Dr. Xu. Through data analysis, the scientists found that the antisymmetry of Faraday’s spin measurements, caused by the environment in the galactic halo, exists across the entire sky, from the center to the anticenter of our Milky Way, suggesting that toroidal magnetic fields with such strange symmetry have huge dimensions existing within a radius of 6,000 light years to 50,000 light years from the center of the Milky Way.

This research gives people a new understanding of the physics of our Milky Way and is a landmark for the study of cosmic magnetic fields.

More info:
J. Xu et al, The giant magnetic toroids in the Milky Way halo, The Astrophysical Journal (2024). DOI: 10.3847/1538-4357/ad3a61

Log information:
Astrophysical Journal

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