Detection of a weak surface magnetic field on Sirius A: are all tepid stars magnetic ?
P. Petit, F. Ligni\`eres, M. Auri\`ere, G.A. Wade, D. Alina, J., Ballot, T. B\"ohm, L. Jouve, A. Oza, F. Paletou, S. Th\'eado

TL;DR
This study reports the first detection of a weak surface magnetic field on Sirius A, suggesting that many intermediate-mass stars may host magnetic fields, challenging previous assumptions about stellar magnetism.
Contribution
It provides the first polarimetric detection of a magnetic field on an Am star, expanding the understanding of magnetic phenomena in non Ap/Bp intermediate-mass stars.
Findings
Detected a magnetic field of approximately 0.2 G on Sirius A.
Confirmed the presence of magnetic fields in non Ap/Bp intermediate-mass stars.
Indicates that a significant fraction of tepid stars could be magnetic.
Abstract
We aim at a highly sensitive search for weak magnetic fields in main sequence stars of intermediate mass, by scanning classes of stars with no previously reported magnetic members. After detecting a weak magnetic field on the normal, rapidly rotating A-type star Vega, we concentrate here on the bright star Sirius A, taken as a prototypical, chemically peculiar, moderately rotating Am star. We employed the NARVAL and ESPaDOnS high-resolution spectropolarimeters to collect 442 circularly polarized spectra, complemented by 60 linearly polarized spectra. Using a list of about 1,100 photospheric spectral lines, we computed a cross correlation line profile from every spectrum, leading to a signal-to-noise ratio of up to 30,000 in the polarized profile. We report the repeated detection of circularly polarized, highly asymmetric signatures in the line profiles, interpreted as Zeeman signatures…
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