non-thermal filament (NTF) rešte-ye nâgarmâyi Fr.: filament non thermique Any of many long and slender structures visible in
→ radio continuum images of the inner hundred parsecs
of the → Galactic Center.
NTFs are typically tens of parsecs long and only a fraction of parsec wide.
They may occur in isolation or in bundles, such as those comprising the linear
portion of the prominent → radio Arc.
Their → non-thermal spectrum and strong
→ linear polarization indicate
→ synchrotron radiation.
The magnetic fields in the NTFs have been
estimated from various means. Early estimates centered on the radio Arc, and
focused on a comparison between the → magnetic pressure
and the estimated → ram pressure
from nearby → molecular cloud
interactions, indicated magnetic
field strengths as high as 1 mG (Morris and Yusef-Zadeh 1985). More recent
observations, however, have pointed to significantly weaker magnetic fields
among the population of NTFs. Synchrotron models of the radio spectrum imply
equipartition magnetic fields between 50-200 μG.
Theoretically, it has been challenging to understand the nature of these
filaments that resemble extragalactic → radio jets
but are not accompanied with
any obvious source of acceleration of charged particles to high energy
→ relativistic
energies. Although a number of detailed models have been
considered, there is no consensus as to the origin of the See also: → non-thermal; → filament. |