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Investigations of Faraday Rotation Maps of Extended Radio Sources ...

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Chapter 2<br />

Is the <strong>Faraday</strong> <strong>Rotation</strong><br />

Source-Intrinsic or not?<br />

For clusters <strong>of</strong> galaxies, the interpretation <strong>of</strong> <strong>Faraday</strong> rotation data relies on the assumption<br />

that the <strong>Faraday</strong> rotation medium and the source <strong>of</strong> the linearly polarised<br />

emission are well separated. This assumption has been challenged by Bicknell et al.<br />

(1990) and more recently by Rudnick & Blundell (2003). This chapter is aimed to<br />

give evidence in favour for the validity <strong>of</strong> the assumption <strong>of</strong> an external <strong>Faraday</strong> screen<br />

which is presumed in the following chapters. This work is published in Enßlin et al.<br />

(2003). My part in this work was the application <strong>of</strong> the statistics to several observational<br />

and generated data sets.<br />

2.1 A Long Lasting Debate<br />

As already mentioned in Sect. 1.2.4, it is difficult to distinguish between source intrinsic<br />

and source external <strong>Faraday</strong> depolarisation. Most authors argue in favour for the<br />

<strong>Faraday</strong> screen being external to an extragalactic extended radio source and identify<br />

the <strong>Faraday</strong> screen with the surrounding intra-cluster medium. Another scenario has<br />

also been widely discussed. In this scenario, the dominating <strong>Faraday</strong> rotating region<br />

is located in a dense, thin mixing layer around the radio source. The consequence <strong>of</strong><br />

this scenario is that the estimated field strengths for the intra-cluster medium would be<br />

lower by at least one order <strong>of</strong> magnitude.<br />

Bicknell et al. (1990) argue in favour <strong>of</strong> the latter scenario. They performed a threedimensional<br />

smoothed particle hydrodynamical simulation <strong>of</strong> a transonic shear layer<br />

so that large-scale nonlinear surface waves can form on the lobes <strong>of</strong> extragalactic radio<br />

sources through the successive merging <strong>of</strong> smaller waves generated by the Kelvin-<br />

Helmholtz instability. They propose a theory which relates the surface waves developing<br />

to substantial variations in rotation measures. They argue, that such a model being<br />

a surface effect would also give rise to a dependence <strong>of</strong> the polarisation angle ϕ on the<br />

wavelength squared as observed.<br />

Recently, Rudnick & Blundell (2003) proposed a different method in order to find<br />

arguments for the scenario <strong>of</strong> the <strong>Faraday</strong> rotating region being a thin dense layer<br />

around the radio source. They compare the intrinsic polarisation angle ϕ 0 with the<br />

RM at each point <strong>of</strong> the source PKS 1246-410 in the Centaurus cluster observed by<br />

29

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