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Alma Mater Studiorum Universit`a degli Studi di Bologna ... - Inaf

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128 6. Summary and conclusions<br />

In M 87, a power spectrum with slope q≃3.0 fits well everywhere. The minimum scale ranges<br />

from 0.06 up to 0.25 kpc. An approximate lower limit to the outer scale is 2.7 kpc.<br />

6.6 General conclusions<br />

1. Origin of the bulk of the Faraday effect observed across ra<strong>di</strong>o galaxies<br />

It is possible to establish that most of the RM is due to material between us and the ra<strong>di</strong>o<br />

source by verifying that the polarization angles have aλ 2 dependence and that the detected<br />

depolarization, if any, is consistent with that expected from instrumental effects (beam and<br />

bandwidth depolarization). This is the case for all of the ra<strong>di</strong>o galaxies analysed in this<br />

thesis and in most earlier work.<br />

This is consistent with the idea that ra<strong>di</strong>o sources have evacuated cavities in the IGM during<br />

their expansion (as observed in X-rays) and that there has been relatively little mixing of<br />

thermal and relativistic plasma. The apparent under-pressure in FR I lobes and tails is most<br />

easily explained if a small amount of thermal plasma has been entrained and heated, but the<br />

densities required are quite small, and consistent with the non-detection of internal Faraday<br />

rotation and depolarization at GHz frequencies.<br />

Prior to the work described here, it was generally thought that the observed RM was<br />

produced almost exclusively by the <strong>di</strong>stributed hot component of the intra-group or intracluster<br />

me<strong>di</strong>um and that interactions with the ra<strong>di</strong>o source were unimportant. In the<br />

present study, three <strong>di</strong>stinct types of magnetic-field structure have been found: a component<br />

with large-scale fluctuations, indeed plausibly associated with the un<strong>di</strong>sturbed intergalactic<br />

me<strong>di</strong>um; a well-ordered field draped around the lea<strong>di</strong>ng edges of ra<strong>di</strong>o lobes and a field with<br />

small-scale fluctuations in the shells of compressed gas surroun<strong>di</strong>ng the inner lobes, perhaps<br />

associated with a mixing layer.<br />

Foreground Faraday rotation in a spherically symmetrical, un<strong>di</strong>sturbed IGM provides a<br />

natural explanation for the systematic asymmetry in RM variance and/or depolarization<br />

observed between the approaching and rece<strong>di</strong>ng lobes (Laing 1988; Garrington et al. 1988;<br />

Morganti et al. 1997; Laing et al. 2008). In contrast, some authors (e.g. Bicknell, Cameron<br />

& Gingold 1990) have suggested that the RM could be localized in a thin layer around<br />

the source, but simple shell models of this type find <strong>di</strong>fficulties in reproducing the observed<br />

asymmetries and are unlikely to be important on large scales. It is likely that the sphericallysymmetric<br />

group component dominates in large, tailed sources such as 3C 449.<br />

The results on banded RM structures presented in this thesis suggest that the magnetised<br />

me<strong>di</strong>um producing them must have a scale comparable to that of the lobe width. If the<br />

128

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