Direct detection of a magnetic field in the photosphere of the single M giant EK Boo: How common is magnetic activity among M giants?
R. Konstantinova-Antova, M. Auriere, C. Charbonnel, N.A. Drake, K.-P., Schroeder, I. Stateva, E. Alecian, P. Petit, and R.Cabanac

TL;DR
This study reports the direct detection of a magnetic field in the M giant EK Boo using spectropolarimetry, suggesting magnetic activity may be more common among M giants than previously thought.
Contribution
First direct measurement of magnetic field in EK Boo, revealing its variability and potential origins, and exploring magnetic activity prevalence in M giants.
Findings
EK Boo has a magnetic field ranging from -0.1 to -8 G.
EK Boo is likely on the AGB or tip of RGB.
Marginal magnetic detection in beta And, another M giant.
Abstract
We study the fast rotating M5 giant EK Boo by means of spectropolarimetry to obtain direct and simultaneous measurements of both the magnetic field and activity indicators, in order to infer the origin of the activity in this fairly evolved giant. We used the new spectropolarimeter NARVAL at the Bernard Lyot Telescope (Observatoire du Pic du Midi, France) to obtain a series of Stokes I and Stokes V profiles for EK Boo. Using the Least Square Deconvolution technique we were able to detect the Zeeman signature of the magnetic field. We measured its longitudinal component by means of the averaged Stokes V and Stokes I profiles. The spectra also permitted us to monitor the CaII K&H chromospheric emission lines, which are well known as indicators of stellar magnetic activity. From ten observations obtained between April 2008 and March 2009, we deduce that EK Boo has a magnetic field, which…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
