Detection of ultra-weak magnetic fields in Am stars: beta UMa and theta Leo
A. Blaz\`ere, P. Petit, F. Ligni\`eres, M. Auri\`ere, J. ballot, T., B\"ohm, C.P. Folsom, M. Gaurat, L. Jouve, A. Lopez Ariste, C. Neiner, and, G.A. Wade

TL;DR
This study detects extremely weak magnetic fields in two Am stars, beta UMa and theta Leo, supporting the idea that many intermediate-mass stars may host such fields, challenging standard Zeeman effect models.
Contribution
It provides the first evidence of Sirius-like magnetic signatures in additional Am stars, suggesting weak magnetic fields are common in these stars.
Findings
Detected circularly polarized signatures in beta UMa and theta Leo.
Signatures are similar to those in Sirius A, indicating magnetic origins.
Weak magnetic fields may be prevalent in intermediate-mass stars.
Abstract
An extremely weak circularly polarized signature was recently discovered in spectral lines of the chemically peculiar Am star Sirius A. A weak surface magnetic field was proposed to account for the observed polarized signal, but the shape of the phase-averaged signature, dominated by a prominent positive lobe, is not expected in the standard theory of the Zeeman effect. We aim at verifying the presence of weak circularly polarized signatures in two other bright Am stars, beta UMa and theta Leo, and investigating the physical origin of Sirius-like polarized signals further. We present here a set of deep spectropolarimetric observations of beta UMa and theta Leo, observed with the NARVAL spectropolarimeter. We analyzed all spectra with the Least Squares Deconvolution multiline procedure. To improve the signal-to-noise ratio and detect extremely weak signatures in Stokes V profiles, we…
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