Evidence of magnetic field decay in massive main-sequence stars
L. Fossati, F. R. N. Schneider, N. Castro, N. Langer, S. Simon-Diaz,, A. Mueller, A. de Koter, T. Morel, V. Petit, H. Sana, G. A. Wade

TL;DR
This study provides evidence that magnetic fields in massive main-sequence stars decay over time, with fewer older magnetic stars observed than expected, suggesting magnetic field decay influences stellar evolution.
Contribution
The paper presents the first comprehensive catalogue and analysis indicating magnetic field decay in massive stars, challenging the assumption of magnetic flux conservation.
Findings
Magnetic stars decrease in number towards the end of their main sequence phase.
Magnetic flux decay is more significant than expected from flux conservation.
Many magnetic stars are slow rotators with ages exceeding their stellar ages, supporting magnetic decay evidence.
Abstract
A significant fraction of massive main-sequence stars show strong, large-scale magnetic fields. The origin of these fields, their lifetimes, and their role in shaping the characteristics and evolution of massive stars are currently not well understood. We compile a catalogue of 389 massive main-sequence stars, 61 of which are magnetic, and derive their fundamental parameters and ages. The two samples contain stars brighter than magnitude 9 in the V band and range in mass between 5 and 100 Msun. We find that the fractional main-sequence age distribution of all considered stars follows what is expected for a magnitude limited sample, while that of magnetic stars shows a clear decrease towards the end of the main sequence. This dearth of old magnetic stars is independent of the choice of adopted stellar evolution tracks, and appears to become more prominent when considering only the most…
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