Observational effects of magnetism in O stars: surface nitrogen abundances
F. Martins (1), C. Escolano (1), G.A. Wade, (2), J.-F. Donati (3),, J.-C. Bouret (4,5), the MiMeS collaboration ((1) LUPM, CNRS, Universite, Montpellier II, (2) RMC, (3) IRAP, CNRS, Universite Paul Sabatier, (4), LAM, CNRS, Universite de Provence, (5) NASA/GSFC)

TL;DR
This study examines how magnetic fields influence nitrogen surface enrichment in O and B stars, revealing two groups with different enrichment levels and suggesting magnetic fields affect internal mixing and evolution.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed spectroscopic analysis of magnetic O stars' surface nitrogen abundances and links magnetic properties to internal mixing processes.
Findings
Magnetic stars split into two groups: no N enrichment and likely N enrichment.
The star with no N enrichment has a weak magnetic field and possibly experienced magnetic braking.
Stars with N enrichment are likely slow rotators with magnetic fields causing extra mixing.
Abstract
We investigate the surface nitrogen content of the six magnetic O stars known to date as well as of the early B-type star tau Sco. We compare these abundances to predictions of evolutionary models to isolate the effects of magnetic field on the transport of elements in stellar interiors. We conduct a quantitative spectroscopic analysis of the sample stars with state-of-the-art atmosphere models. We rely on high signal-to-noise ratio, high resolution optical spectra obtained with ESPADONS at CFHT and NARVAL at TBL. Atmosphere models and synthetic spectra are computed with the code CMFGEN. Values of N/H together with their uncertainties are determined and compared to predictions of evolutionary models. We find that the magnetic stars can be divided into two groups: one with stars displaying no N enrichment (one object); and one with stars most likely showing extra N enrichment (5…
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