SiO maser polarization and magnetic field in evolved cool stars
L. Marinho, F. Herpin, H. Wiesemeyer, A. L\'opez Ariste, A. Baudry, A., Asensio Ramos, A. L\`ebre, P. Mathias, M. Montarg\`es

TL;DR
This study measures magnetic fields in the inner envelopes of evolved cool stars using SiO maser polarization, revealing field strengths of several Gauss and suggesting a complex magnetic topology possibly linked to stellar activity.
Contribution
It provides new, more precise magnetic field measurements in evolved stars' circumstellar regions and constrains the magnetic field geometry, advancing understanding of stellar magnetism.
Findings
Magnetic fields of several Gauss to tens of Gauss are detected.
The data exclude a purely poloidal magnetic field configuration.
Magnetic field strength varies with stellar phase in at least one star.
Abstract
Both magnetic fields and photospheric/atmospheric dynamics can be involved in triggering the important mass loss observed in evolved cool stars. Previous works have revealed that these objects exhibit a magnetic field extending beyond their surface. The origin of this magnetic field is still under debate with mechanisms involving a turbulent dynamo, convection, stellar pulsation, and cool spots. Our goal is to estimate the magnetic field strength in the inner circumstellar envelope of six evolved cool stars (five Miras and one Red Supergiant). Combining this work with previous studies, we tentatively constrain the global magnetic field type observed and shed light on the mechanisms at its origin. Using the XPOL polarimeter installed at the IRAM-30 m telescope, we observed the 28 SiO v = 1, J = 2-1 maser line emission and obtained simultaneous spectroscopic measurements of the four…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · Geomagnetism and Paleomagnetism Studies · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies
