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Featured researches published by S. A. Mao.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2013

THERMAL PLASMA IN THE GIANT LOBES OF THE RADIO GALAXY CENTAURUS A

Shane P. O'Sullivan; Ilana J. Feain; N. M. McClure-Griffiths; R. D. Ekers; E. Carretti; Timothy Robishaw; S. A. Mao; B. M. Gaensler; Joss Bland-Hawthorn

We present a Faraday rotation measure (RM) study of the diffuse, polarized, radio emission from the giant lobes of the nearest radio galaxy, Centaurus A. After removal of the smooth Galactic foreground RM component, using an ensemble of background source RMs located outside the giant lobes, we are left with a residual RM signal associated with the giant lobes. We find that the most likely origin of this residual RM is from thermal material mixed throughout the relativistic lobe plasma. The alternative possibility of a thin-skin/boundary layer of magnetoionic material swept up by the expansion of the lobes is highly unlikely since it requires, at least, an order of magnitude enhancement of the swept-up gas over the expected intragroup density on these scales. Strong depolarization observed from 2.3 to 0.96 GHz also supports the presence of a significant amount of thermal gas within the lobes; although depolarization solely due to RM fluctuations in a foreground Faraday screen on scales smaller than the beam cannot be ruled out. Considering the internal Faraday rotation scenario, we find a thermal gas number density of ~10–4 cm–3, implying a total gas mass of ~1010 M ☉ within the lobes. The thermal pressure associated with this gas (with temperature kT ~ 0.5 keV, obtained from recent X-ray results) is approximately equal to the non-thermal pressure, indicating that over the volume of the lobes, there is approximate equipartition between the thermal gas, radio-emitting electrons, and magnetic field (and potentially any relativistic protons present).


The Astrophysical Journal | 2013

Magnetized Gas in the Smith High Velocity Cloud

Alex S. Hill; S. A. Mao; Robert A. Benjamin; Felix J. Lockman; N. M. McClure-Griffiths

We report the first detection of magnetic fields associated with the Smith High Velocity Cloud. We use a catalog of Faraday rotation measures toward extragalactic radio sources behind the Smith Cloud, new H I observations from the Robert C. Byrd Green Bank Telescope, and a spectroscopic map of Hα from the Wisconsin H-Alpha Mapper Northern Sky Survey. There are enhancements in rotation measure (RM) of 100 rad m–2 which are generally well correlated with decelerated Hα emission. We estimate a lower limit on the line-of-sight component of the field of 8 μG along a decelerated filament; this is a lower limit due to our assumptions about the geometry. No RM excess is evident in sightlines dominated by H I or Hα at the velocity of the Smith Cloud. The smooth Hα morphology of the emission at the Smith Cloud velocity suggests photoionization by the Galactic ionizing radiation field as the dominant ionization mechanism, while the filamentary morphology and high (1 Rayleigh) Hα intensity of the lower-velocity magnetized ionized gas suggests an ionization process associated with shocks due to interaction with the Galactic interstellar medium. The presence of the magnetic field may contribute to the survival of high velocity clouds like the Smith Cloud as they move from the Galactic halo to the disk. We expect these data to provide a test for magnetohydrodynamic simulations of infalling gas.


arXiv: Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics | 2015

Using SKA Rotation Measures to Reveal the Mysteries of the Magnetised Universe

M. Johnston-Hollitt; F. Govoni; R. Beck; S. Dehghan; Luke Pratley; Takuya Akahori; George Heald; I. Agudo; A. Bonafede; E. Carretti; T. Clarke; Sergio Colafrancesco; T. Ensslin; L. Feretti; B. M. Gaensler; M. Haverkorn; S. A. Mao; Niels Oppermann; Lawrence Rudnick; Anna M. M. Scaife; D. H. F. M. Schnitzeler; Jeroen Stil; A. R. Taylor; Valentina Vacca

We know that magnetic fields are pervasive across all scales in the Universe and over all of cosmic time and yet our understanding of many of the properties of magnetic fields is still limited. We do not yet know when, where or how the first magnetic fields in the Universe were formed, nor do we fully understand their role in fundamental processes such as galaxy formation or cosmic ray acceleration or how they influence the evolution of astrophysical objects. The greatest challenge to addressing these issues has been a lack of deep, broad bandwidth polarimetric data over large areas of the sky. The Square Kilometre Array will radically improve this situation via an all-sky polarisation survey that delivers both high quality polarisation imaging in combination with observations of 7-14 million extragalactic rotation measures. Here we summarise how this survey will improve our understanding of a range of astrophysical phenomena on scales from individual Galactic objects to the cosmic web.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2017

The Fan Region at 1.5 GHz – I. Polarized synchrotron emission extending beyond the Perseus Arm

Alex S. Hill; T. L. Landecker; E. Carretti; Kevin A. Douglas; X. H. Sun; B. M. Gaensler; S. A. Mao; N. M. McClure-Griffiths; W. Reich; M. Wolleben; John M. Dickey; A. D. Gray; Marijke Haverkorn; J. P. Leahy; D. H. F. M. Schnitzeler

The Fan Region is one of the dominant features in the polarized radio sky, long thought to be a local (distance ≲500  pc) synchrotron feature. We present 1.3–1.8 GHz polarized radio continuum observations of the region from the Global Magneto-Ionic Medium Survey and compare them to maps of Hα and polarized radio continuum intensity from 0.408 to 353 GHz. The high-frequency (>1 GHz) and low-frequency (≲600 MHz) emissions have different morphologies, suggesting a different physical origin. Portions of the 1.5 GHz Fan Region emission are depolarized by ≈30 per cent by ionized gas structures in the Perseus Arm, indicating that this fraction of the emission originates ≳2 kpc away. We argue for the same conclusion based on the high polarization fraction at 1.5 GHz (≈40 per cent). The Fan Region is offset with respect to the Galactic plane, covering −5° ≲ b ≲ +10°; we attribute this offset to the warp in the outer Galaxy. We discuss origins of the polarized emission, including the spiral Galactic magnetic field. This idea is a plausible contributing factor although no model to date readily reproduces all of the observations. We conclude that models of the Galactic magnetic field should account for the ≳1  GHz emission from the Fan Region as a Galactic scale, not purely local, feature.


arXiv: Astrophysics of Galaxies | 2015

Structure, dynamical impact and origin of magnetic fields in nearby galaxies in the SKA era

R. Beck; Dominik Bomans; Sergio Colafrancesco; Ralf-Juergen Dettmar; K. Ferrière; Andrew Fletcher; George Heald; Volker Heesen; Cathy Horellou; Marita Krause; Yu-Qing Lou; S. A. Mao; Rosita Paladino; E. Schinnerer; D. D. Sokoloff; Jeroen Stil; F. S. Tabatabaei

Magnetic fields are an important ingredient of the interstellar medium (ISM). Besides their importance for star formation, they govern the transport of cosmic rays, relevant to the launch and regulation of galactic outflows and winds, which in turn are pivotal in shaping the structure of halo magnetic fields. Mapping the small-scale structure of interstellar magnetic fields in many nearby galaxies is crucial to understand the interaction between gas and magnetic fields, in particular how gas flows are affected. Elucidation of the magnetic role in, e.g., triggering star formation, forming and stabilising spiral arms, driving outflows, gas heating by reconnection and magnetising the intergalactic medium has the potential to revolutionise our physical picture of the ISM and galaxy evolution in general. Radio polarisation observations in the very nearest galaxies at high frequencies (3 GHz) and with high spatial resolution (500) hold the key here. The galaxy survey with SKA1 that we propose will also be a major step to understand the galactic dynamo, which is important for models of galaxy evolution and for astrophysical magnetohydrodynamics in general. Field amplification by turbulent gas motions, which is crucial for efficient dynamo action, has been investigated so far only in simulations, while compelling evidence of turbulent fields from observations is still lacking.


arXiv: Astrophysics of Galaxies | 2015

Magnetic Field Tomography in Nearby Galaxies with the Square Kilometre Array

George Heald; R. Beck; de Erwin Blok; Ralf-Juergen Dettmar; Andrew Fletcher; B. M. Gaensler; M. Haverkorn; Volker Heesen; Cathy Horellou; Marita Krause; S. A. Mao; Niels Oppermann; Anna M. M. Scaife; D. D. Sokoloff; Jeroen Stil; F. S. Tabatabaei; K. Takahashi; A. R. Taylor; A. Williams

Magnetic fields play an important role in shaping the structure and evolution of the interstellar medium (ISM) of galaxies, but the details of this relationship remain unclear. With SKA1, the 3D structure of galactic magnetic fields and its connection to star formation will be revealed. A highly sensitive probe of the internal structure of the magnetoionized ISM is the partial depolarization of synchrotron radiation from inside the volume. Different configurations of magnetic field and ionized gas within the resolution element of the telescope lead to frequency-dependent changes in the observed degree of polarization. The results of spectro-polarimetric observations are tied to physical structure in the ISM through comparison with detailed modeling, supplemented with the use of new analysis techniques that are being actively developed and studied within the community such as Rotation Measure Synthesis. The SKA will enable this field to come into its own and begin the study of the detailed structure of the magnetized ISM in a sample of nearby galaxies, thanks to its extraordinary wideband capabilities coupled with the combination of excellent surface brightness sensitivity and angular resolution.


arXiv: Astrophysics of Galaxies | 2015

Measuring magnetism in the Milky Way with the Square Kilometre Array

M. Haverkorn; Takuya Akahori; E. Carretti; K. Ferrière; Peter Frick; B. M. Gaensler; George Heald; M. Johnston-Hollitt; David J. Jones; T. L. Landecker; S. A. Mao; Aris Noutsos; Niels Oppermann; W. Reich; Timothy Robishaw; Anna M. M. Scaife; D. H. F. M. Schnitzeler; Rodion Stepanov; X. X. Sun; Russ Taylor

Magnetic fields in the Milky Way are present on a wide variety of sizes and strengths, influencing many processes in the Galactic ecosystem such as star formation, gas dynamics, jets, and evolution of supernova remnants or pulsar wind nebulae. Observation methods are complex and indirect; the most used of these are a grid of rotation measures of unresolved polarized extragalactic sources, and broadband polarimetry of diffuse emission. Current studies of magnetic fields in the Milky Way reveal a global spiral magnetic field with a significant turbulent component; the limited sample of magnetic field measurements in discrete objects such as supernova remnants and HII regions shows a wide variety in field configurations; a few detections of magnetic fields in Young Stellar Object jets have been published; and the magnetic field structure in the Galactic Center is still under debate. The SKA will unravel the 3D structure and configurations of magnetic fields in the Milky Way on sub-parsec to galaxy scales, including field structure in the Galactic Center. The global configuration of the Milky Way disk magnetic field, probed through pulsar RMs, will resolve controversy about reversals in the Galactic plane. Characteristics of interstellar turbulence can be determined from the grid of background RMs. We expect to learn to understand magnetic field structures in protostellar jets, supernova remnants, and other discrete sources, due to the vast increase in sample sizes possible with the SKA. This knowledge of magnetic fields in the Milky Way will not only be crucial in understanding of the evolution and interaction of Galactic structures, but will also help to define and remove Galactic foregrounds for a multitude of extragalactic and cosmological studies. Advancing Astrophysics with the Square Kilometre Array


arXiv: Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics | 2015

Broadband Polarimetry with the Square Kilometre Array: A Unique Astrophysical Probe

B. M. Gaensler; I. Agudo; Takuya Akahori; Julie Banfield; R. Beck; E. Carretti; J. S. Farnes; M. Haverkorn; George Heald; David J. Jones; T. L. Landecker; S. A. Mao; R. P. Norris; Shane P. O'Sullivan; Lawrence Rudnick; D. H. F. M. Schnitzeler; N. Seymour; X. X. Sun

Faraday rotation of polarised background sources is a unique probe of astrophysical magnetic fields in a diverse range of foreground objects. However, to understand the properties of the polarised sources themselves and of depolarising phenomena along the line of sight, we need to complement Faraday rotation data with polarisation observations over very broad bandwidths. Just as it is impossible to properly image a complex source with limited u-v coverage, we can only meaningfully understand the magneto-ionic properties of polarised sources if we have excellent coverage in


Nature Astronomy | 2017

Detection of microgauss coherent magnetic fields in a galaxy five billion years ago

S. A. Mao; C. Carilli; B. M. Gaensler; O. Wucknitz; C. Keeton; A. Basu; R. Beck; P. P. Kronberg; Ellen G. Zweibel

\lambda^2


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2018

Statistical properties of Faraday rotation measure in external galaxies – I: intervening disc galaxies

Aritra Basu; S. A. Mao; Andrew Fletcher; Nissim Kanekar; Anvar Shukurov; D. H. F. M. Schnitzeler; Valentina Vacca; Henrik Junklewitz

-space. We here propose a set of broadband polarisation surveys with the Square Kilometre Array, which will provide a singular set of scientific insights on the ways in which galaxies and their environments have evolved over cosmic time.

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M. Haverkorn

Radboud University Nijmegen

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George Heald

Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation

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N. M. McClure-Griffiths

Australia Telescope National Facility

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Ellen G. Zweibel

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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