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American Astronomical Society, Astrophysical Journal, 1(899), p. 28, 2020

DOI: 10.3847/1538-4357/aba1e2

arXiv, 2020

DOI: 10.48550/arxiv.2007.00176

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The JCMT BISTRO Survey: Magnetic Fields Associated with a Network of Filaments in NGC 1333

Journal article published in 2020 by Yasuo Doi ORCID, Tetsuo Hasegawa ORCID, Ray S. Furuya ORCID, Simon Coudé ORCID, Simon Coud'e, Charles L. H. Hull ORCID, Doris Arzoumanian, Pierre Bastien ORCID, Michael Chun-Yuan Chen ORCID, James Di Francesco ORCID, James Francesco, Rachel K. Friesen ORCID, Martin Houde ORCID, Shu-Ichiro Inutsuka ORCID, Steve Mairs ORCID and other authors.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.

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Abstract

Abstract We present new observations of the active star formation region NGC 1333 in the Perseus molecular cloud complex from the James Clerk Maxwell Telescope B-Fields In Star-forming Region Observations (BISTRO) survey with the POL-2 instrument. The BISTRO data cover the entire NGC 1333 complex (∼1.5 pc × 2 pc) at 0.02 pc resolution and spatially resolve the polarized emission from individual filamentary structures for the first time. The inferred magnetic field structure is complex as a whole, with each individual filament aligned at different position angles relative to the local field orientation. We combine the BISTRO data with low- and high- resolution data derived from Planck and interferometers to study the multiscale magnetic field structure in this region. The magnetic field morphology drastically changes below a scale of ∼1 pc and remains continuous from the scales of filaments (∼0.1 pc) to that of protostellar envelopes (∼0.005 pc or ∼1000 au). Finally, we construct simple models in which we assume that the magnetic field is always perpendicular to the long axis of the filaments. We demonstrate that the observed variation of the relative orientation between the filament axes and the magnetic field angles are well reproduced by this model, taking into account the projection effects of the magnetic field and filaments relative to the plane of the sky. These projection effects may explain the apparent complexity of the magnetic field structure observed at the resolution of BISTRO data toward the filament network.