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Phys. Rev. Lett. 81, 3575–3578 (1998)

Microwave Background Signals from Tangled Magnetic Fields

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Kandaswamy Subramanian1,2 and John D. Barrow1
1Astronomy Centre, University of Sussex, Brighton BN1 9QJ, United Kingdom
2National Centre for Radio Astrophysics TIFR, Poona University Campus, Ganeshkhind, Pune 411 007, India

Received 24 March 1998; published in the issue dated 26 October 1998

An inhomogeneous cosmological magnetic field will create Alfvén-wave modes that induce a small rotational velocity perturbation on the last scattering surface of the microwave background radiation. The Alfvén-wave mode survives Silk damping on much smaller scales than the compressional modes. This, in combination with its rotational nature, ensures that there will be no sharp cutoff in anisotropy on arc min scales. We estimate that a magnetic field which redshifts to a present value of 3×10-9G produces temperature anisotropies at the 10μK level at and below 10 arc min scales. A tangled magnetic field, which is large enough to influence the formation of large scale structure, is therefore potentially detectable by future observations.

© 1998 The American Physical Society

URL:
http://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PhysRevLett.81.3575
DOI:
10.1103/PhysRevLett.81.3575
PACS:
98.62.En, 98.70.Vc