Periodic Radio Emission from the M7 Dwarf 2MASS J13142039+1320011: Implications for the Magnetic Field Topology
M. McLean (Harvard), E. Berger (Harvard), J. Irwin (Harvard), J., Forbrich (Harvard), A. Reiners (Gottingen)

TL;DR
This study reports the detection of highly luminous, stable, and periodically varying radio emission from the M7 dwarf 2MASS J13142039+1320011, revealing insights into its magnetic field topology and stability over a decade.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed multi-frequency radio and optical analysis of an ultracool dwarf, demonstrating stable, periodic radio emission linked to magnetic field geometry and strength.
Findings
Radio emission is the most luminous from an ultracool dwarf to date.
Radio and optical periods are consistent with stellar rotation.
Magnetic field strength inferred to be at least 8 kG.
Abstract
We present multi-epoch radio and optical observations of the M7 dwarf 2MASS J13142039+1320011. We detect a ~1 mJy source at 1.43, 4.86, 8.46 and 22.5 GHz, making it the most luminous radio emission over the widest frequency range detected from an ultracool dwarf to date. A 10 hr VLA observation reveals that the radio emission varies sinusoidally with a period of 3.89+/-0.05 hr, and an amplitude of ~30% at 4.86 GHz and ~20% at 8.46 GHz. The periodicity is also seen in circular polarization, where at 4.86 GHz the polarization reverses helicity from left- to right-handed in phase with the total intensity. An archival detection in the FIRST survey indicates that the radio emission has been stable for at least a decade. We also detect periodic photometric variability in several optical filters with a period of 3.79 hr, and measure a rotation velocity of vsini=45+/-5 km/s, in good agreement…
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