On magnetic inhibition of photospheric macro-turbulence generated in the iron-bump opacity zone of O-stars
J. O. Sundqvist, V. Petit, S. P. Owocki, G. A. Wade, J. Puls, and the, MiMeS Collaboration

TL;DR
This study investigates how strong magnetic fields in O-stars influence macro-turbulence in their photospheres, finding that very strong fields can suppress turbulence likely caused by sub-surface convection and gravity-mode oscillations.
Contribution
It provides observational evidence linking magnetic field strength to the suppression of macro-turbulence in O-stars, highlighting the role of magnetic stabilization in stellar atmospheres.
Findings
NGC1624-2 has negligible macro-turbulence due to its strong magnetic field.
Other magnetic O-stars show significant macro-turbulence with weaker magnetic fields.
Magnetic suppression of turbulence correlates with the temperature where magnetic and gas pressures balance.
Abstract
Massive, hot OB-stars show clear evidence of strong macroscopic broadening (in addition to rotation) in their photospheric spectral lines. This paper examines the occurrence of such "macro-turbulence" in slowly rotating O-stars with strong, organised surface magnetic fields. Focusing on the CIV 5811A line, we find evidence for significant macro-turbulent broadening in all stars except NGC1624-2, which also has (by far) the strongest magnetic field. Instead, the very sharp CIV lines in NGC1624-2 are dominated by magnetic Zeeman broadening, from which we estimate a dipolar field of approximately 20 kG. By contrast, magnetic broadening is negligible in the other stars (due to their weaker field strengths, on order 1 kG), and their CIV profiles are typically very broad and similar to corresponding lines observed in non-magnetic O-stars. Quantifying this by an isotropic, Gaussian…
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