Magnetometry of the classical T Tauri star GQ Lup: non-stationary dynamos & spin evolution of young Suns
J. F. Donati, S. G. Gregory, S. H. P. Alencar, G. Hussain, J. Bouvier,, C. Dougados, M. M. Jardine, F. Menard, M. M. Romanova, the MaPP, Collaboration

TL;DR
This study uses spectropolarimetric observations to analyze the magnetic field, rotation, and evolution of the classical T Tauri star GQ Lup, revealing non-stationary dynamo processes and magnetic topology changes over time.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed magnetic topology maps of GQ Lup at two epochs, demonstrating evolving large-scale magnetic fields and insights into its spin evolution and dynamo activity.
Findings
GQ Lup has a strong large-scale magnetic field up to 6 kG.
Magnetic topology is mostly poloidal and axisymmetric, with an octupolar component dominating.
The star is likely to rapidly spin up due to insufficient magnetic disruption of the accretion disc.
Abstract
We report here results of spectropolarimetric observations of the classical T Tauri star (cTTS) GQ Lup carried out with ESPaDOnS at the Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope (CFHT) in the framework of the "Magnetic Protostars and Planets" (MaPP) programme, and obtained at 2 different epochs (2009 July & 2011 June). From these observations, we first infer that GQ Lup has a photospheric temperature of 4,300+-50\^A K and a rotation period of 8.4+-0.3 d; it implies that it is a 1.05+-0.07 Msun star viewed at an inclination of ~30deg, with an age of 2-5 Myr, a radius of 1.7+-0.2 Rsun, and has just started to develop a radiative core. Large Zeeman signatures are clearly detected at all times, both in photospheric lines & in accretion-powered emission lines, probing longitudinal fields of up to 6 kG and hence making GQ Lup the cTTS with the strongest large-scale fields known as of today. Rotational…
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