Discovery of the magnetic field in the pulsating B star beta Cephei
H.F. Henrichs, J.A. de Jong, E. Verdugo, R.S. Schnerr, C. Neiner,, J.-F. Donati, C. Catala, S.L.S. Shorlin, G.A. Wade, P.M. Veen, J.S. Nichols,, E.M.F. Damen, A. Talavera, G.M. Hill, L. Kaper, A.M. Tijani, V.C. Geers, K., Wiersema, B. Plaggenborg, K.L.J. Rygl

TL;DR
This study confirms the presence of a dipolar magnetic field in the pulsating B star beta Cephei, linking magnetic, pulsational, and wind variability over a 17-year observational period.
Contribution
It provides the first confirmed detection of a magnetic field in an upper main-sequence pulsating star, combining spectropolarimetry and UV spectroscopy analyses.
Findings
Beta Cephei hosts a sinusoidal magnetic field with ~97 G amplitude.
The star's rotation period is approximately 12 days.
Magnetic and UV wind line variability are correlated and support an oblique magnetic-rotator model.
Abstract
Although the star itself is not He enriched, the periodicity and the variability in the UV wind lines of the pulsating B1 IV star beta Cep are similar to what is observed in magnetic He-peculiar B stars, suggesting that beta Cep is magnetic. We searched for a magnetic field using spectropolarimetry. From UV spectroscopy, we analysed the wind variability and investigated the correlation with the magnetic data. Using 130 time-resolved circular polarisation spectra, obtained with the MuSiCoS spectropolarimeter at the 2m TBL from 1998 until 2005, we applied the least-squares deconvolution method on the Stokes V spectra and derived the longitudinal component of the integrated magnetic field over the visible hemisphere of the star. We performed a period analysis on the magnetic data and on EW measurements of UV wind lines obtained over 17 years. We also analysed the short- and long-term…
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