Published online by Cambridge University Press: 14 August 2015
I will review the impressive advances in the observations of the galactic magnetic field made since the time of van de Hulst's review at the 1966 Noordwijk Symposium (van de Hulst, 1967). Most of these observations are so recent that the consequences have not yet been worked out very well and are in need of discussion. Luckily the emphasis in the present Symposium, unlike that in many others, is on discussion. For this reason I will not hesitate to include in my review provocative speculations. I will base my discussion on Mathewson's (1968) elegant magnetic field model, consisting of a local field in the form of a sheared helix, superimposed on a large scale longitudinal field. I will include the criticism of this model by Gardner et al. (1969b). Mathewson has succeeded in accounting for such data as the distribution of background polarized radiation from the Galaxy, the distribution of rotation measures of extra-galactic radio sources and even the spurs and ridges in galactic continuum emission. There are critics who inherently distrust models that account for too many things at one time, but I feel that we should try to account for as many things as possible with the least number of models. Mathewson has succeeded in uniting much data and I will only add a few pieces to his model.