Periodic Radio and H-alpha Emission from the L Dwarf Binary 2MASSW J0746425+200032: Exploring the Magnetic Field Topology and Radius of an L Dwarf
E. Berger (Harvard), R.E. Rutledge, N. Phan-Bao, G. Basri, M.S., Giampapa, J.E. Gizis, J. Liebert, E. Martin, T.A. Fleming

TL;DR
This study presents multi-wavelength observations of an L dwarf binary revealing a complex magnetic field topology, periodic emissions, and a smaller-than-expected stellar radius, providing new insights into ultracool dwarf magnetic structures and physical properties.
Contribution
It is the first to measure the radius of an L dwarf and analyze its magnetic field topology through simultaneous radio, X-ray, UV, and optical observations.
Findings
Detected stable radio pulses indicating a strong magnetic field.
Measured the L dwarf's radius as 0.078 solar radii, smaller than models predict.
Suggested a quadrupole magnetic field topology based on phase lag analysis.
Abstract
[Abridged] We present an 8.5-hour simultaneous radio, X-ray, UV, and optical observation of the L dwarf binary 2MASSW J0746+20. We detect strong radio emission, dominated by short-duration periodic pulses at 4.86 GHz with P=124.32+/-0.11 min. The stability of the pulse profiles and arrival times demonstrates that they are due to the rotational modulation of a B~1.7 kG magnetic field. A quiescent non-variable component is also detected, likely due to emission from a uniform large-scale field. The H-alpha emission exhibits identical periodicity, but unlike the radio pulses it varies sinusoidally and is offset by exactly 1/4 of a phase. The sinusoidal variations require chromospheric emission from a large-scale field structure, with the radio pulses likely emanating from the magnetic poles. While both light curves can be explained by a rotating mis-aligned magnetic field, the 1/4 phase lag…
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