The rapid rotation and complex magnetic field geometry of Vega
P. Petit, F. Ligni\`eres, G.A. Wade, M. Auri\`ere, T. B\"ohm, S., Bagnulo, B. Dintrans, A. Fumel, J. Grunhut, J. Lanoux, A. Morgenthaler, V., Van Grootel

TL;DR
This study confirms the presence of a weak, complex magnetic field on Vega, revealing a predominantly polar magnetic region with stable features over a year, suggesting a new class of weakly magnetic intermediate-mass stars.
Contribution
The paper provides the first detailed magnetic topology of Vega, demonstrating a polar magnetic region and confirming the star's weak magnetic field, indicating a new class of magnetic stars.
Findings
Magnetic field detected with Zeeman signatures.
Magnetic topology shows a polar concentration.
Field structure remains stable over one year.
Abstract
The recent discovery of a weak surface magnetic field on the normal intermediate-mass star Vega raises the question of the origin of this magnetism in a class of stars that was not known to host magnetic fields. We aim to confirm the field detection and provide additional observational constraints about the field characteristics, by modelling the magnetic geometry of the star and by investigating the seasonal variability of the reconstructed field. We analyse a total of 799 circularly-polarized spectra collected with the NARVAL and ESPaDOnS spectropolarimeters during 2008 and 2009. We employ a cross-correlation procedure to compute, from each spectrum, a mean polarized line profile with a signal-to-noise ratio of about 20,000. The technique of Zeeman-Doppler Imaging is then used to determine the rotation period of the star and reconstruct the large-scale magnetic geometry of Vega at two…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
