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Linear polarization study of open clusters towards the anticenter direction: Signature of the spiral arms

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arxiv 2408.05603 v1 pith:XCQ7UXP2 submitted 2024-08-10 astro-ph.GA

Linear polarization study of open clusters towards the anticenter direction: Signature of the spiral arms

classification astro-ph.GA
keywords polarizationdustberkeleyclusterstowardsdirectiondistributionanticenter
verification ladder T0 review T1 audit T2 compute T3 formal T4 reserved
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Our objective is to investigate the distribution of dust and associated large-scale structures of the Galaxy using optical linear polarization measurements of various open clusters located at different distances in the Galactic anticenter direction. We present R-band linear polarization observations of stars towards five open clusters: Kronberger~1, Berkeley~69, Berkeley~71, Berkeley~19, and King~8 in the anticenter direction. The polarization observations were carried out using AIMPOL instrument mounted on the 104 cm Sampurnanand telescope of ARIES, Nainital, making it the first study to target the polarization observations towards distant clusters ($\sim$6~kpc). We combined the observed polarization data with the distance information from the Gaia space telescope to infer the dust distribution along the line of sight. The variation in the degree of polarization and extinction with distance reveals the presence of multiple dust layers along each cluster direction. In addition, common foreground dust layers detected towards different cluster directions highlight the presence of global features such as spiral arms. Our results show that the dust clouds at 2~kpc towards Berkeley~69 and Berkeley~71 coincide with the Perseus arm, while the dust layer at $\sim$4~kpc towards distant clusters, Berkeley~19 and King~8, indicates the presence of the Outer arm. The large-scale dust distribution obtained by combining our polarization results with the previous polarization studies of nearby open clusters suggests that the anticenter direction is characterized by low extinction, homogeneous dust distribution with somewhat uniform orientation of the plane-of-sky component of the magnetic field along the line of sight. Our study demonstrates the utility of polarization as a tool to study the large-scale dust distribution.

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Cited by 1 Pith paper

Reviewed papers in the Pith corpus that reference this work. Sorted by Pith novelty score.

  1. DHARA: Data Handling and Automated Reduction pipeline for AIMPOL

    astro-ph.IM 2026-07 accept novelty 6.0

    An automated Python pipeline for AIMPOL dual-beam polarimetry recovers literature polarization values within 2σ for standards and the Alessi 1 cluster and is adaptable to similar instruments.