Magnetic activity and radial velocity filtering of young Suns: The weak-line T Tauri stars Par 1379 and Par 2244
C. A. Hill, A. Carmona, J.-F. Donati, G. A. J. Hussain, S. G. Gregory,, S. H. P. Alencar, J. Bouvier, the MaTYSSE collaboration

TL;DR
This study uses spectropolarimetric monitoring to map magnetic fields and surface activity of two young weak-line T Tauri stars, Par 1379 and Par 2244, and assesses their radial velocity variations to search for close-in giant planets.
Contribution
It provides detailed magnetic and surface activity maps of two young stars and demonstrates the effectiveness of RV filtering to detect or rule out close-in giant planets.
Findings
Par 1379 has a weak, mostly poloidal magnetic field tilted 65°.
Par 2244 hosts a stronger, more complex magnetic field with significant toroidal components.
Radial velocity residuals after filtering show no evidence of close-in giant planets.
Abstract
We report the results of our spectropolarimetric monitoring of the weak-line T-Tauri stars (wTTSs) Par 1379 and Par 2244, within the MaTYSSE (Magnetic Topologies of Young Stars and the Survival of close-in giant Exoplanets) programme. Both stars are of a similar mass (1.6 and 1.8 M) and age (1.8 and 1.1 Myr), with Par 1379 hosting an evolved low-mass dusty circumstellar disc, and with Par 2244 showing evidence of a young debris disc. We detect profile distortions and Zeeman signatures in the unpolarized and circularly polarized lines for each star, and have modelled their rotational modulation using tomographic imaging, yielding brightness and magnetic maps. We find that Par 1379 harbours a weak (250 G), mostly poloidal field tilted from the rotation axis. In contrast, Par 2244 hosts a stronger field (860 G) split 3:2 between poloidal and toroidal components, with…
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