First Detection of a Strong Magnetic Field on a Bursty Brown Dwarf: Puzzle Solved
S.V. Berdyugina, D.M. Harrington, O. Kuzmychov, J.R. Kuhn, G., Hallinan, A.F. Kowalski, S.L. Hawley

TL;DR
This paper reports the first direct detection of a strong magnetic field on a brown dwarf, linking magnetic activity to observed bursts and providing insights into brown dwarf magnetism and evolution.
Contribution
It presents the first quantitative measurement of a 5 kG magnetic field on a brown dwarf and models its active region topology, advancing understanding of brown dwarf magnetic phenomena.
Findings
Detected a 5.1 kG magnetic field on LSR J1835+3259.
Linked magnetic field to periodic emission bursts.
Revealed active region topology with hot plasma loops.
Abstract
We report the first direct detection of a strong, 5 kG magnetic field on the surface of an active brown dwarf. LSR J1835+3259 is an M8.5 dwarf exhibiting transient radio and optical emission bursts modulated by fast rotation. We have detected the surface magnetic field as circularly polarized signatures in the 819 nm sodium lines when an active emission region faced the Earth. Modeling Stokes profiles of these lines reveals the effective temperature of 2800 K and log gravity acceleration of 4.5. These parameters place LSR J1835+3259 on evolutionary tracks as a young brown dwarf with the mass of 554 M and age of 224 Myr. Its magnetic field is at least 5.1 kG and covers at least 11% of the visible hemisphere. The active region topology recovered using line profile inversions comprises hot plasma loops with a vertical stratification of optical and radio emission…
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