Magnetic field measurements and wind-line variability of OB-type stars
R.S. Schnerr, H.F. Henrichs, C. Neiner, E. Verdugo, J. de Jong, V.C., Geers, K. Wiersema, B. van Dalen, A. Tijani, B. Plaggenborg, and K.L.J. Rygl

TL;DR
This study investigates magnetic fields in 25 OB-type stars, finding no significant magnetic detections but identifying UV wind-line variability as an indirect magnetic indicator, suggesting most stellar magnetic fields are weak or localized.
Contribution
First comprehensive spectropolarimetric survey of OB stars linking UV wind-line variability to magnetic field presence or absence.
Findings
No significant magnetic fields detected in the sample.
UV wind-line variability correlates with potential magnetic fields.
Weak or localized magnetic fields are likely responsible for observed variability.
Abstract
Context. The first magnetic fields in O- and B-type stars that do not belong to the Bp-star class, have been discovered. The cyclic UV wind-line variability, which has been observed in a significant fraction of early-type stars, is likely to be related to such magnetic fields. Aims. We attempt to improve our understanding of massive-star magnetic fields, and observe twenty-five carefully-selected, OB-type stars. Methods. Of these stars we obtain 136 magnetic field strength measurements. We present the UV wind-line variability of all selected targets and summarise spectropolarimetric observations acquired using the MUSICOS spectropolarimeter, mounted at the TBL, Pic du Midi, between December 1998 and November 2004. From the average Stokes I and V line profiles, derived using the LSD method, we measure the magnetic field strengths, radial velocities, and first moment of the line profiles.…
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