The importance of non-photon noise in stellar spectropolarimetry. The spurious detection of a non-existing magnetic field in the A0 supergiant HD 92207
Stefano Bagnulo, Luca Fossati, Oleg Kochukhov, and John D. Landstreet

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that non-photon noise and data reduction inaccuracies can mimic magnetic signals in stellar spectropolarimetry, leading to false detections, and emphasizes the importance of rigorous calibration and quality control.
Contribution
It reveals how small instabilities and data reduction errors can produce spurious magnetic signals, challenging previous claims of stellar magnetic fields.
Findings
Re-analysis shows no magnetic field in HD 92207.
Non-photon noise can mimic magnetic signals in spectropolarimetry.
Accurate calibration reduces false detections.
Abstract
The low-resolution, Cassegrain mounted, FORS spectropolarimeter of the ESO Very Large Telescope is being extensively used for magnetic field surveys. Some of the new discoveries suggest that relatively strong magnetic fields may play an important role in numerous physical phenomena observed in the atmospheres as well as in the circumstellar environments of certain kinds of stars. We show in detail how small instabilities or data-reduction inaccuracies represent an alternative explanation for the origin of certain signals of circular polarisation published in recent years. With the help of analytical calculations we simulate the observation of a spectral line in spectropolarimetric mode, adding very small spurious wavelength shifts, which may mimic the effects of seeing variations, rapid variations of the stellar radial velocity, or instrument instabilities. As a case study, we then…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
