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管家婆免费开奖大全 astronomer's research suggests 'magnetic tunnel' surrounds our solar system

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Jennifer West, a researcher at 管家婆免费开奖大全's Dunlap Institute for Astronomy & Astrophysics, says two magnetic structures seen on opposite sides of the sky form what looks like a tunnel around the solar system (photo courtesy of Jennifer West)

A 管家婆免费开奖大全 astronomer鈥檚 research suggests the solar system is surrounded by a magnetic tunnel that can be seen in radio waves.

Jennifer West, a research associate at the Dunlap Institute for Astronomy & Astrophysics, is making a scientific case that two bright structures seen on opposite sides of the sky 鈥 previously considered to be separate 鈥 are actually connected and are made of rope-like filaments. The connection forms what looks like a tunnel around our solar system.

The data results of West鈥檚 research

鈥淚f we were to look up in the sky,鈥 says West, 鈥渨e would see this tunnel-like structure in just about every direction we looked 鈥 that is, if we had eyes that could see radio light.鈥

Called 鈥渢he North Polar Spur鈥 and 鈥渢he Fan Region,鈥 astronomers have known about these two structures for decades, West says. But most scientific explanations have focused on them individually. West and her colleagues, by contrast, believe they are the first astronomers to connect them as a unit.

Made up of charged particles and a magnetic field, the structures are shaped like long ropes, and are located about 350 light-years away from us 鈥 and are about 1,000 light-years long.

鈥淭hat鈥檚 the equivalent distance of travelling between Toronto and Vancouver two trillion times,鈥 West says.

Left: A curving tunnel, with lines formed by the tunnel lights and road lane markers, forms a similar geometry to the proposed model of the North Polar Spur and Fan Region (photo by Pixabay/ illustration by Jennifer West). Right: The sky as it would appear in radio polarized waves (image by Dominion Radio Astrophysical Observatory/Villa Elisa telescope/ESA/Planck Collaboration/Stellarium/Jennifer West)

West has been thinking about these features on and off for 15 years 鈥 ever since she first saw a map of the radio sky. More recently, she built a computer model that calculated what the radio sky would look like from Earth as she varied the shape and location of the long ropes. The model allowed West to 鈥渂uild鈥 the structure around us, and showed her what the sky would look like through our telescopes. It was this new perspective that helped her to match the model to the data.

鈥淎 few years ago, one of our co-authors, Tom Landecker, told me about a paper from 1965 鈥 from the early days of radio astronomy,鈥 West says. 鈥淏ased on the crude data available at this time, the authors [Mathewson and Milne], speculated that these polarized radio signals could arise from our view of the Local Arm of the galaxy, from inside it.

鈥淭hat paper inspired me to develop this idea and tie my model to the vastly better data that our telescopes give us today.鈥

Illustrated map of Milky Way Galaxy shown with the position and size of proposed filaments. Inset shows a more detailed view of the Local environments, and the position of Local Bubble and various nearby dust clouds (image by NASA/JPL-Caltech/R. Hurt/SSC/Caltech with annotations by Jennifer West)

West uses the Earth鈥檚 map as an example. The North pole is on the top and the equator is through the middle 鈥 unless you re-draw the map from a different perspective. The same is true for the map of our galaxy. 鈥淢ost astronomers look at a map with the North pole of the galaxy up and the galactic centre in the middle,鈥 West explains. 鈥淎n important part that inspired this idea was to remake that map with a different point in the middle.鈥

鈥淭his is extremely clever work,鈥 says Bryan Gaensler, a professor at the Dunlap Institute and an author of the publication. 鈥淲hen Jennifer first pitched this to me, I thought it was too 鈥榦ut-there鈥 to be a possible explanation. But she was ultimately able to convince me. Now, I鈥檓 excited to see how the rest of the astronomy community reacts.鈥

An expert in magnetism in galaxies and the interstellar medium, West looks forward to the more possible discoveries connected to this research.

鈥淢agnetic fields don鈥檛 exist in isolation,鈥 she says. 鈥淭hey all must to connect to each other. So, a next step is to better understand how this local magnetic field connects both to the larger-scale galactic magnetic field, and also to the smaller scale magnetic fields of our sun and Earth.鈥

In the meantime, West agrees that the new 鈥渢unnel鈥 model not only brings new insight to the science community, but also a ground-breaking concept for the rest of us.

鈥淚 think it鈥檚 just awesome to imagine that these structures are everywhere whenever we look up into the night sky.鈥

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