Weak magnetic fields in central stars of planetary nebulae?
M. Steffen (1), S. Hubrig (1), H. Todt (2), M. Sch\"oller (3), W.-R., Hamann (2), C. Sandin (1), D. Sch\"onberner (1) ((1) Leibniz-Institut f\"ur, Astrophysik Potsdam, Germany, (2) Universit\"at Potsdam, Institut f\"ur, Physik und Astronomie, Germany

TL;DR
This study investigates magnetic fields in central stars of planetary nebulae using polarimetric spectra, finding weak fields in some stars and suggesting even faint magnetic fields could influence nebular shaping.
Contribution
It provides the first systematic polarimetric survey of PN central stars, setting upper limits on magnetic field strengths and exploring their potential role in nebula morphology.
Findings
Weak magnetic fields (~100 G) detected in some central stars.
Strong magnetic fields (>1 kG) are rare among PNe central stars.
Weak fields may still influence nebula shaping according to models.
Abstract
It is not yet clear whether magnetic fields play an essential role in shaping planetary nebulae (PNe), or whether stellar rotation alone and/or a close binary companion can account for the variety of the observed nebular morphologies. In a quest for empirical evidence verifying or disproving the role of magnetic fields in shaping PNe, we follow up on previous attempts to measure the magnetic field in a representative sample of PN central stars. We obtained low-resolution polarimetric spectra with FORS 2 at VLT for a sample of twelve bright central stars of PNe with different morphology, including two round nebulae, seven elliptical nebulae, and three bipolar nebulae. Two targets are Wolf-Rayet type central stars. For the majority of the observed central stars, we do not find any significant evidence for the existence of surface magnetic fields. However, our measurements may indicate the…
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