Monitoring the young planet host V1298 Tau with SPIRou: planetary system and evolving large-scale magnetic field
B.Finociety, J.-F. Donati, P.I. Cristofari, C. Moutou, C. Cadieux,, N.J. Cook, E. Artigau, C. Baruteau, F. Debras, P. Fouqu\'e, J. Bouvier, S.H.P, Alencar, X. Delfosse, K. Grankin, A. Carmona, P. Petit, \'A. K\'osp\'al and, the SLS/SPICE consortium

TL;DR
This study uses spectropolarimetric data to map the magnetic field evolution of the young star V1298 Tau and detects the radial velocity signature of its outer planet, providing insights into stellar magnetism and exoplanet properties.
Contribution
First detailed magnetic topology and its evolution for V1298 Tau, combined with exoplanet mass constraints from spectropolarimetric and photometric data.
Findings
Magnetic field is mainly poloidal and axisymmetric, varying from 90 to 170 G.
Potential polarity reversal of the star's magnetic field observed in 2023.
Outer planet e has a mass of about 0.95 Jupiter masses with a 53-day orbit.
Abstract
We report results of a spectropolarimetric monitoring of the young Sun-like star V1298~Tau based on data collected with the near-infrared spectropolarimeter SPIRou at the Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope between late 2019 and early 2023. Using Zeeman-Doppler Imaging and the Time-dependent Imaging of Magnetic Stars methods on circularly polarized spectra, we reconstructed the large-scale magnetic topology of the star (and its temporal evolution), found to be mainly poloidal and axisymmetric with an average strength varying from 90 to 170 G over the ~3.5 years of monitoring. The magnetic field features a dipole whose strength evolves from 85 to 245 G, and whose inclination with respect to the stellar rotation axis remains stable until 2023 where we observe a sudden change, suggesting that the field may undergo a polarity reversal, potentially similar to those periodically experienced by the…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
