On detectability of Zeeman broadening in optical spectra of F- and G-dwarfs
Richard I. Anderson, Ansgar Reiners, Sami K. Solanki

TL;DR
This study assesses the detectability of Zeeman broadening in optical spectra of sun-like stars, highlighting the influence of temperature components on magnetic field measurements and demonstrating the challenges in distinguishing magnetic signals.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed analysis of Zeeman broadening detectability using LTE spectral line inversion with multiple temperature component models, revealing model dependence and potential ambiguities.
Findings
Upper limits of 200 G for the Sun and 150 G for 61 Vir.
Evidence of ~500 G magnetic field in 59 Vir.
Temperature component assumptions significantly affect magnetic field estimates.
Abstract
We investigate the detectability of Zeeman broadening in optical Stokes I spectra of slowly rotating sun-like stars. To this end, we apply the LTE spectral line inversion package SPINOR to very-high quality CES data and explore how fit quality depends on the average magnetic field, Bf . One-component (OC) and two-component (TC) models are adopted. In OC models, the entire surface is assumed to be magnetic. Under this assumption, we determine formal 3{\sigma} upper limits on the average magnetic field of 200 G for the Sun, and 150 G for 61 Vir (G6V). Evidence for an average magnetic field of ~ 500 G is found for 59 Vir (G0V), and of ~ 1000 G for HD 68456 (F6V). A distinction between magnetic and non-magnetic regions is made in TC models, while assuming a homogeneous distribution of both components. In our TC inversions of 59 Vir, we investigate three cases: both components have equal…
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.
