Magnetism, rotation, and nonthermal emission in cool stars -- Average magnetic field measurements in 292 M dwarfs
A. Reiners, D. Shulyak, P.J. K\"apyl\"a, I. Ribas, E. Nagel, M., Zechmeister, J.A. Caballero, Y. Shan, B. Fuhrmeister, A. Quirrenbach, P.J., Amado, D. Montes, S.V. Jeffers, M. Azzaro, V.J.S. B\'ejar, P. Chaturvedi, Th., Henning, M. K\"urster, E. Pall\'e

TL;DR
This study measures magnetic fields in 292 M dwarfs, revealing how magnetic activity correlates with rotation and energy, and providing empirical relations that clarify stellar dynamo processes and their impact on stellar emissions.
Contribution
First large-scale measurement of surface magnetic fields in 260 M dwarfs, establishing empirical relations between magnetic flux, rotation, and stellar activity indicators.
Findings
Magnetic flux is proportional to rotation period in slow rotators.
Surface magnetic fields saturate at around 800 G in rapid rotators.
Coronal X-ray, Hα, and Ca H&K emissions correlate with magnetic flux.
Abstract
Stellar dynamos generate magnetic fields that are of fundamental importance to the variability and evolution of Sun-like and low-mass stars, and for the development of their planetary systems. We report measurements of surface-average magnetic fields in 292 M dwarfs from a comparison with radiative transfer calculations; for 260 of them, this is the first measurement of this kind. Our data were obtained from more than 15,000 high-resolution spectra taken during the CARMENES project. They reveal a relation between average field strength, <B>, and Rossby number, , resembling the well-studied rotation-activity relation. Among the slowly rotating stars, we find that magnetic flux, , is proportional to rotation period, , and among the rapidly rotating stars that average surface fields do not grow significantly beyond the level set by the available kinetic energy.…
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