Internal magnetic fields in 13 red giants detected by asteroseismology
Gang Li, S\'ebastien Deheuvels, Tanda Li, J\'er\^ome Ballot,, Fran\c{c}ois Ligni\`eres

TL;DR
This study uses asteroseismology to detect and analyze internal magnetic fields in 13 red giants, revealing their strengths, geometries, and evolution, which enhances understanding of stellar magnetic phenomena and their effects on stellar structure.
Contribution
First systematic detection and measurement of internal magnetic fields in a large sample of red giants using asteroseismology, including field strengths and geometries.
Findings
Core magnetic fields range from 20 to 150 kG.
Magnetic field strengths decrease with stellar evolution.
Detected fields have diverse geometries, often non-dipolar.
Abstract
While surface fields have been measured for stars across the HR diagram, internal magnetic fields remain largely unknown. The recent seismic detection of magnetic fields in the cores of several Kepler red giants has opened a new avenue to understand better the origin of magnetic fields and their impact on stellar structure and evolution. We aim to use asteroseismology to systematically search for internal magnetic fields in red giant stars and to determine the strengths and geometries of these fields. Magnetic fields are known to break the symmetry of rotational multiplets. In red giants, oscillation modes are mixed, behaving as pressure modes in the envelope and as gravity modes in the core. Magnetism-induced asymmetries are expected to be stronger for g-dominated modes than for p-dominated modes and to decrease with frequency. After collecting a sample of 2500 Kepler red giant stars…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astro and Planetary Science
