LBT/PEPSI Spectropolarimetry of a Magnetic Morphology Shift in Old Solar-type Stars
Travis S. Metcalfe, Oleg Kochukhov, Ilya V. Ilyin, Klaus G., Strassmeier, Diego Godoy-Rivera, Marc H. Pinsonneault

TL;DR
This study investigates how a shift in magnetic field structure in old solar-type stars affects their magnetic braking efficiency, using spectropolarimetric measurements to support the hypothesis of a magnetic morphology transition.
Contribution
It provides observational evidence linking magnetic morphology changes to reduced magnetic braking in middle-aged stars, supporting the dynamo shutdown hypothesis.
Findings
Active star shows large-scale magnetic field signature.
Less active star shows no significant magnetic signal.
Magnetic morphology shift likely reduces braking efficiency.
Abstract
Solar-type stars are born with relatively rapid rotation and strong magnetic fields. Through a process known as magnetic braking, the rotation slows over time as stellar winds gradually remove angular momentum from the system. The rate of angular momentum loss depends sensitively on the magnetic morphology, with the dipole field exerting the largest torque on the star. Recent observations suggest that the efficiency of magnetic braking may decrease dramatically in stars near the middle of their main-sequence lifetimes. One hypothesis to explain this reduction in efficiency is a shift in magnetic morphology from predominantly larger to smaller spatial scales. We aim to test this hypothesis with spectropolarimetric measurements of two stars that sample chromospheric activity levels on opposite sides of the proposed magnetic transition. As predicted, the more active star (HD 100180)…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
