Bibcode
Santos, F. P.; Ade, Peter A. R.; Angilè, Francesco E.; Ashton, Peter; Benton, Steven J.; Devlin, Mark J.; Dober, Bradley; Fissel, Laura M.; Fukui, Yasuo; Galitzki, Nicholas; Gandilo, Natalie N.; Klein, Jeffrey; Korotkov, Andrei L.; Li, Zhi-Yun; Martin, Peter G.; Matthews, Tristan G.; Moncelsi, Lorenzo; Nakamura, Fumitaka; Netterfield, Calvin B.; Novak, Giles; Pascale, Enzo; Poidevin, F.; Savini, Giorgio; Scott, Douglas; Shariff, Jamil A.; Diego Soler, Juan; Thomas, Nicholas E.; Tucker, Carole E.; Tucker, Gregory S.; Ward-Thompson, Derek
Bibliographical reference
The Astrophysical Journal, Volume 837, Issue 2, article id. 161, 22 pp. (2017).
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2017
Journal
Citations
18
Refereed citations
18
Description
We present a large-scale combination of near-infrared (near-IR)
interstellar polarization data from background starlight with polarized
emission data at submillimeter wavelengths for the Vela C molecular
cloud. The near-IR data consist of more than 6700 detections probing a
range of visual extinctions between 2 and 20 {mag} in and around the
cloud. The submillimeter data were collected in Antarctica by the
Balloon-borne Large Aperture Submillimeter Telescope for Polarimetry.
This is the first direct combination of near-IR and submillimeter
polarization data for a molecular cloud aimed at measuring the
“polarization efficiency ratio” ({R}{eff}), a
quantity that is expected to depend only on grain-intrinsic physical
properties. It is defined as {p}500/({p}I/{τ
}V), where p 500 and p I are
polarization fractions at 500 μ {{m}} and the I band, respectively,
and {τ }V is the optical depth. To ensure that the same
column density of material is producing both polarization from emission
and from extinction, we conducted a careful selection of near-background
stars using 2MASS, Herschel, and Planck data. This selection excludes
objects contaminated by the Galactic diffuse background material as well
as objects located in the foreground. Accounting for statistical and
systematic uncertainties, we estimate an average {R}{eff}
value of 2.4 ± 0.8, which can be used to test the predictions of
dust grain models designed for molecular clouds when such predictions
become available. The ratio {R}{eff} appears to be relatively
flat as a function of the cloud depth for the range of visual
extinctions probed.