New magnetic field measurements of beta Cephei stars and Slowly Pulsating B stars
S. Hubrig, M. Briquet, P. De Cat, M. Schoeller, T. Morel, I. Ilyin

TL;DR
This study reports new magnetic field measurements in beta Cephei and Slowly Pulsating B stars, revealing that a significant fraction of these pulsating stars possess weak magnetic fields, with potential correlations to their pulsation and rotation properties.
Contribution
It provides the first extensive magnetic survey of these stars using FORS1 at VLT, identifying magnetic fields in a notable fraction of both confirmed and candidate pulsating B-type stars.
Findings
Approximately one third of beta Cephei stars have magnetic fields.
About half of the SPB stars studied are magnetic.
Magnetic fields tend to be weaker in stars with higher pulsation frequencies and faster rotation.
Abstract
We present the results of the continuation of our magnetic survey with FORS1 at the VLT of a sample of B-type stars consisting of confirmed or candidate beta Cephei stars and Slowly Pulsating B (hereafter SPB) stars, along with a small number of normal B-type stars. A weak mean longitudinal magnetic field of the order of a few hundred Gauss was detected in three beta Cephei stars and two stars suspected to be beta Cephei stars, in five SPB stars and eight stars suspected to be SPB stars. Additionally, a longitudinal magnetic field at a level larger than 3sigma has been diagnosed in two normal B-type stars, the nitrogen-rich early B-type star HD52089 and in the B5 IV star HD153716. Roughly one third of beta Cephei stars have detected magnetic fields: Out of 13 beta Cephei stars studied to date with FORS1, four stars possess weak magnetic fields, and out of the sample of six suspected…
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