Molecules as magnetic probes of starspots
Nadine Afram, Svetlana V. Berdyugina

TL;DR
This paper evaluates the effectiveness of various molecules as magnetic probes for starspots across different spectral types, providing synthetic polarization profiles to guide observational strategies.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive modeling approach to assess molecular lines as diagnostics for stellar magnetic fields in cool stars, highlighting their spectral type dependence.
Findings
MgH and FeH are strongest in G dwarfs
CaH signals dominate in K dwarfs
TiO is most prominent in M dwarfs
Abstract
Stellar dynamo processes can be explored by measuring the magnetic field. This is usually obtained using the atomic and molecular Zeeman effect in spectral lines. While the atomic Zeeman effect can only access warmer regions, the use of molecular lines is of advantage for studying cool objects. The molecules MgH, TiO, CaH, and FeH are suited to probe stellar magnetic fields, each one for a different range of spectral types, by considering the signal that is obtained from modeling various spectral types. We have analyzed the usefulness of different molecules (MgH, TiO, CaH, and FeH) as diagnostic tools for studying stellar magnetism on active G-K-M dwarfs. We investigate the temperature range in which the selected molecules can serve as indicators for magnetic fields on highly active cool stars and present synthetic Stokes profiles for the modeled spectral type. We modeled a star with a…
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