Furthest ever detection of a galaxy’s magnetic field
Thursday 7 September 2023
 ALMA view of the 9io9 galaxy - © ESO
ESO, 6th September 2023. Using the Atacama Large
Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA), astronomers have detected the
magnetic field of a galaxy so far away that its light has taken more
than 11 billion years to reach us: we see it as it was when the Universe
was just 2.5 billion years old. The result provides astronomers with
vital clues about how the magnetic fields of galaxies like our own Milky
Way came to be. Lots of astronomical bodies in the Universe have magnetic fields, whether it be planets, stars or galaxies. “Many
people might not be aware that our entire galaxy and other galaxies are
laced with magnetic fields, spanning tens of thousands of light-years,”
says James Geach, a professor of astrophysics at the University of
Hertfordshire, UK, and lead author of the study published today in Nature. “We actually know very little about how these fields form, despite their being quite fundamental to how galaxies evolve,”
adds Enrique Lopez Rodriguez, a researcher at Stanford University, USA,
who also participated in the study. It is not clear how early in the
lifetime of the Universe, and how quickly, magnetic fields in galaxies
form because so far astronomers have only mapped magnetic fields in
galaxies close to us. Now, using ALMA, in which the European Southern Observatory (ESO)
is a partner, Geach and his team have discovered a fully formed
magnetic field in a distant galaxy, similar in structure to what is
observed in nearby galaxies. The field is about 1000 times weaker than
the Earth’s magnetic field, but extends over more than 16 000
light-years. “This discovery gives us new clues as to how galactic-scale magnetic fields are formed,”
explains Geach. Observing a fully developed magnetic field this early
in the history of the Universe indicates that magnetic fields spanning
entire galaxies can form rapidly while young galaxies are still growing. The
team believes that intense star formation in the early Universe could
have played a role in accelerating the development of the fields.
Moreover, these fields can in turn influence how later generations of
stars will form. Co-author and ESO astronomer Rob Ivison says that the
discovery opens up “a new window onto the inner workings of galaxies, because the magnetic fields are linked to the material that is forming new stars.” To make this detection, the team searched for light emitted by dust grains in a distant galaxy, 9io9 [1].
Galaxies are packed full of dust grains and when a magnetic field is
present, the grains tend to align and the light they emit becomes polarised.
This means that the light waves oscillate along a preferred direction
rather than randomly. When ALMA detected and mapped a polarised signal
coming from 9io9, the presence of a magnetic field in a very distant
galaxy was confirmed for the first time. “No other telescope could have achieved this,”
says Geach. The hope is that with this and future observations of
distant magnetic fields the mystery of how these fundamental galactic
features form will begin to unravel. Notes[1]
9io9 was discovered in the course of a citizen science project. The
discovery was helped by viewers of the British BBC television programme
Stargazing Live, when over three nights in 2014 the audience was asked
to examine millions of images in the hunt for distant galaxies. Links
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