ALMA polarimetry measures magnetically aligned dust grains in the torus of NGC 1068

Bibliographic Details
Title: ALMA polarimetry measures magnetically aligned dust grains in the torus of NGC 1068
Authors: Lopez-Rodriguez, Enrique, Alonso-Herrero, Almudena, García-Burillo, Santiago, Gordon, Michael S., Ichikawa, Kohei, Imanishi, Masatoshi, Kameno, Seiji, Levenson, Nancy A., Nikutta, Robert, Packham, Chris
Publication Year: 2019
Collection: Astrophysics
Subject Terms: Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies
More Details: The obscuring structure surrounding active galactic nuclei (AGN) can be explained as a dust and gas flow cycle that fundamentally connects the AGN with their host galaxies. This structure is believed to be associated with dusty winds driven by radiation pressure. However, the role of magnetic fields, which are invoked in almost all models for accretion onto a supermassive black hole and outflows, is not thoroughly studied. Here we report the first detection of polarized thermal emission by means of magnetically aligned dust grains in the dusty torus of NGC 1068 using ALMA Cycle 4 polarimetric dust continuum observations ($0.07"$, $4.2$ pc; 348.5 GHz, $860$ $\mu$m). The polarized torus has an asymmetric variation across the equatorial axis with a peak polarization of $3.7\pm0.5$\% and position angle of $109\pm2^{\circ}$ (B-vector) at $\sim8$ pc east from the core. We compute synthetic polarimetric observations of magnetically aligned dust grains assuming a toroidal magnetic field and homogeneous grain alignment. We conclude that the measured 860 $\mu$m continuum polarization arises from magnetically aligned dust grains in an optically thin region of the torus. The asymmetric polarization across the equatorial axis of the torus arises from 1) an inhomogeneous optical depth, and 2) a variation of the velocity dispersion, i.e. variation of the magnetic field turbulence at sub-pc scales, from the eastern to the western region of the torus. These observations and modeling constrain the torus properties beyond spectral energy distribution results. This study strongly supports that magnetic fields up to a few pc contribute to the accretion flow onto the active nuclei.
Comment: 19 pages, 11 figures (Accepted for Publication to ApJ)
Document Type: Working Paper
DOI: 10.3847/1538-4357/ab8013
Access URL: http://arxiv.org/abs/1905.08802
Accession Number: edsarx.1905.08802
Database: arXiv
More Details
DOI:10.3847/1538-4357/ab8013