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Published April 15, 2017 | Submitted + Published
Journal Article Open

New probe of magnetic fields in the prereionization epoch. I. Formalism

Abstract

We propose a method of measuring extremely weak magnetic fields in the intergalactic medium prior to and during the epoch of cosmic reionization. The method utilizes the Larmor precession of spin-polarized neutral hydrogen in the triplet state of the hyperfine transition. This precession leads to a systematic change in the brightness temperature fluctuations of the 21-cm line from the high-redshift universe, and thus the statistics of these fluctuations encode information about the magnetic field the atoms are immersed in. The method is most suited to probing fields that are coherent on large scales; in this paper, we consider a homogenous magnetic field over the scale of the 21-cm fluctuations. Due to the long lifetime of the triplet state of the 21-cm transition, this technique is naturally sensitive to extremely weak field strengths, of order 10^(−19)  G at a reference redshift of ∼20 (or 10^(−21)  G if scaled to the present day). Therefore, this might open up the possibility of probing primordial magnetic fields just prior to reionization. If the magnetic fields are much stronger, it is still possible to use this method to infer their direction, and place a lower limit on their strength. In this paper (Paper I in a series on this effect), we perform detailed calculations of the microphysics behind this effect, and take into account all the processes that affect the hyperfine transition, including radiative decays, collisions, and optical pumping by Lyman-α photons. We conclude with an analytic formula for the brightness temperature of linear-regime fluctuations in the presence of a magnetic field, and discuss its limiting behavior for weak and strong fields.

Additional Information

© 2017 American Physical Society. Received 4 December 2014; published 21 April 2017. We would like to thank Peter Goldreich and Takeshi Kobayashi for some helpful conversations during the early part of this work. T. V. acknowledges support from the Schmidt Fellowship and the Fund for Memberships in Natural Sciences at the Institute for Advanced Study. V. G. gratefully acknowledges the support of the Friends of the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton. During the duration of this work, T. V. and A. O. were supported by the International Fulbright Science and Technology Award, and C. H., A. M., A. O., and T. V. were supported by the David and Lucile Packard Foundation, the Simons Foundation, and the U.S. Department of Energy. C. H. is also supported by NASA.

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Published - PhysRevD.95.083010.pdf

Submitted - 1410.2250v1.pdf

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Created:
August 19, 2023
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