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Multifrequency polarimetry is emerging as a powerful probe of blazar jets, especially with the advent of the Imaging X-ray Polarimetry Explorer (IXPE) space observatory. We studied the polarization of high-synchrotron peaked (HSP) blazars, for which both optical and X-ray emission can be attributed to synchrotron radiation from a population of nonthermal electrons. We adopted an axisymmetric stationary force-free jet model in which the electromagnetic fields are determined by the jet shape. When the jet is nearly parabolic, the X-ray polarization degree is Π X ∼ 15–50%, and the optical polarization degree is Π O ∼ 5–25%. The polarization degree is strongly chromatic: Π X /Π O ∼ 2–9. This chromaticity is due to the softening of the electron distribution at high energies, and is much stronger than for a uniform magnetic field. The electric vector position angle (EVPA) is aligned with the projection of the jet axis on the plane of the sky. These results compare very well with multifrequency polarimetric observations of HSP blazars. When the jet is instead nearly cylindrical, the polarization degree is large and weakly chromatic (we find Π X ∼ 70% and Π O ∼ 60%, close to the expected values for a uniform magnetic field). The EVPA is perpendicular to the projection of the jet axis on the plane of the sky. A cylindrical geometry is therefore practically ruled out by current observations. The polarization degree and the EVPA may be less sensitive to the specific particle acceleration process (e.g., magnetic reconnection or shocks) than previously thought.
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F. Bolis
Emanuele Sobacchi
University of L'Aquila
F. Tavecchio
National Institute for Astrophysics
Astronomy and Astrophysics
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Bolis et al. (Fri,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/68e5d9edb6db64358756fc1c — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/202450387