Discovery of a strong magnetic field in the rapidly rotating B2Vn star HR 7355
M.E. Oksala, G.A. Wade, W.L.F. Marcolino, J. Grunhut, D. Bohlender, N., Manset, R.H.D. Townsend, and the MiMeS Collaboration

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of a strong magnetic field in the rapidly rotating B2Vn star HR 7355, revealing its magnetic properties, rotation, and evidence of a structured magnetosphere, advancing understanding of magnetic massive stars.
Contribution
First detection of a strong magnetic field in HR 7355, the most rapidly rotating magnetic B-type star, with detailed modeling of its magnetic geometry and evidence of a structured magnetosphere.
Findings
Magnetic field strength between 13-17 kG
Rotational period of approximately 0.52 days
Evidence of a structured magnetosphere
Abstract
We report the detection of a strong, organized magnetic field in the helium-variable early B-type star HR 7355 using spectropolarimetric data obtained with ESPaDOnS on the 3.6-m Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope within the context of the Magnetism in Massive Stars (MiMeS) Large Program. HR 7355 is both the most rapidly rotating known main-sequence magnetic star and the most rapidly rotating helium-strong star, with = 300 15 km s and a rotational period of 0.5214404 0.0000006 days. We have modeled our eight longitudinal magnetic field measurements assuming an oblique dipole magnetic field. Constraining the inclination of the rotation axis to be between and , we find the magnetic obliquity angle to be between and , and the polar strength of the magnetic field at the stellar surface to be between 13-17 kG. The…
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