Can we predict the global magnetic topology of a pre-main sequence star from its position in the Hertzsprung-Russell diagram?
S. G. Gregory (1), J.-F. Donati (2), J. Morin (3,4), G. A. J. Hussain, (5), N. J. Mayne (6), L. A. Hillenbrand (1), M. Jardine (7) ((1) Caltech, (2), Toulouse, (3) G\"ottingen, (4) DIAS, (5) ESO, (6) Exeter, (7) St Andrews)

TL;DR
This study suggests that the magnetic topology of pre-main sequence stars can be predicted from their position in the Hertzsprung-Russell diagram, revealing distinct regimes linked to internal stellar structure and evolution.
Contribution
It introduces a correlation between stellar magnetic topology and HR diagram position, providing a new approach to infer magnetic properties from stellar evolution stages.
Findings
Magnetic complexity increases with radiative core development.
Fully convective stars tend to have strong, axisymmetric dipolar fields.
Four magnetic topology regimes are identified across the PMS evolution.
Abstract
ZDI studies have shown that the magnetic fields of T Tauri stars can be significantly more complex than a simple dipole and can vary markedly between sources. We collect and summarize the magnetic field topology information obtained to date and present Hertzsprung-Russell (HR) diagrams for the stars in the sample. Intriguingly, the large scale field topology of a given pre-main sequence (PMS) star is strongly dependent upon the stellar internal structure, with the strength of the dipole component of its multipolar magnetic field decaying rapidly with the development of a radiative core. Using the observational data as a basis, we argue that the general characteristics of the global magnetic field of a PMS star can be determined from its position in the HR diagram. Moving from hotter and more luminous to cooler and less luminous stars across the PMS of the HR diagram, we present evidence…
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