SETI public: Tentative Identification of Interstellar Dust in Heliosphere Nose

From: LARRY KLAES (ljk4_at_msn.com)
Date: Wed Jun 15 2005 - 06:48:59 PDT

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    Paper: astro-ph/0506293
    Date: Mon, 13 Jun 2005 22:30:30 GMT (178kb)

    Title: Tentative Identification of Interstellar Dust in Heliosphere Nose

    Authors: Priscilla C. Frisch
    Comments: Submitted to Astrophysical Journal Letters
    \\
      Observations of polarization toward nearby stars in the upwind direction
    made
    by (Tinbergen, 1982) are consistent with an origin associated with
    interstellar
    dust grains entrained in interstellar magnetic fields wrapped around the
    heliosphere nose. The region of maximum polarization is centered around
    ecliptic coordinates (295 deg,0 deg). The direction of maximum polarization
    is
    offset along the ecliptic longitude by about 35 deg from the heliosphere
    nose.
    An offset is also seen between the region with the best aligned dust grains
    (ecliptic longitudes 281 deg to 330 deg) and inflowing interstellar dust
    grains
    observed by Ulysses and Galileo, and in this region polarization strength
    anti-correlates with ecliptic latitude. These offsets support an
    interpretation
    whereby the maximum polarization occurs in a direction perpendicular to the
    interstellar field lines, the region of consistent polarization angle shows
    the
    deflection of small grains, and the inflow of larger grains shows the
    undeflected grain population. The offsets in the aligned dust direction, and
    separate upwind directions for inflowing dust, HeI, and HI, are understood
    if
    the filtration factors for each species depend on gyroradius, so that
    observed
    upwind directions respond to heliosheath asymmetries introduced by the
    draped
    interstellar magnetic field. The presence of interstellar dust grains
    captured
    in the heliosheath represents a potentially important, but weak, large scale
    contamination of the cosmic microwave background signal.

    \\ ( http://arXiv.org/abs/astro-ph/0506293 , 178kb)


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