A dominant magnetic dipole for the evolved Ap star candidate EK Eridani
M. Auriere, R. Konstantinova-Antova, P. Petit, T. Roudier, J.-F., Donati, C. Charbonnel, B. Dintrans, F. Lignieres, G.A. Wade, A. Morgenthaler,, S. Tsvetkova

TL;DR
This study reveals that EK Eri, a slowly rotating giant, has a predominantly dipolar magnetic field likely inherited from an Ap star progenitor, explained through spectropolarimetric observations and magnetic modeling.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed magnetic topology of EK Eri, supporting the hypothesis of a remnant Ap star magnetic dipole influencing its current magnetic properties.
Findings
EK Eri exhibits a strong, stable magnetic dipole.
Magnetic activity correlates with photometric variations.
The magnetic field is dominated by a large-scale poloidal component.
Abstract
EK Eri is one of the most slowly rotating active giants known, and has been proposed to be the descendant of a strongly magnetic Ap star. We have performed a spectropolarimetric study of EK Eri over 4 photometric periods with the aim of inferring the topology of its magnetic field. We used the NARVAL spectropolarimeter at the Bernard Lyot telescope at the Pic du Midi Observatory, along with the least-squares deconvolution method, to extract high signal-to-noise ratio Stokes V profiles from a timeseries of 28 polarisation spectra. We have derived the surface-averaged longitudinal magnetic field Bl. We fit the Stokes V profiles with a model of the large-scale magnetic field and obtained Zeeman Doppler images of the surface magnetic strength and geometry. Bl variations of up to about 80 G are observed without any reversal of its sign, and which are in phase with photometric ephemeris. The…
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