Abstract
Angular dispersion functions are typically used to estimate the fluctuations in polarization angle around the mean magnetic field orientation in dense regions, such as molecular clouds. The technique provides accurate turbulent-to-regular magnetic field ratios, 〈Bt2〉1/2/Bpos , which are often underestimated by the classic Davis–Chandrasekhar–Fermi method. We assess the technique's suitability to characterize the turbulent and regular plane-of-sky magnetic field in low-density structures of the nearby interstellar medium (ISM), particularly when the turbulence outer scale, δ, is smaller than the smallest scale observed, ℓ min. We use optical polarization maps of three intermediate-latitude fields (∣b∣ ≳ 7.°5) with dimensions of 0.°3 × 0.°3, sourced from the Interstellar Polarization Survey–General ISM catalog. We decomposed the H i emission detected by the Galactic All-Sky Survey within our fields to estimate the multiphase ISM properties associated with the structure coupled to the magnetic field. We produced maps of the plane-of-sky magnetic field strength (B pos), mass density (ρ), and turbulent velocity dispersion (σ v,turb). In the regions with well-defined structures at d < 400 pc, the average B – ranges from ∼3 μG to ∼9 μ G, depending on the method and physical properties. In the region where structures extend up to 1000 pc, B pos varies from ∼1 to ∼3 μ G. The results agree with previous estimations in the local, diffuse ISM. Finally, optical starlight polarization and thermal dust polarization at 353 GHz consistently reveal a highly regular plane-of-sky magnetic field orientation unfazed by diffuse dust structures observed at 12 μm.
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