1,206 research outputs found
The magnetic characteristics of Galactic OB stars from the MiMeS survey of magnetism in massive stars
The Magnetism in Massive Stars (MiMeS) project represents the largest
systematic survey of stellar magnetism ever undertaken. Based on a sample of
over 550 Galactic B and O-type stars, the MiMeS project has derived the basic
characteristics of magnetism in hot, massive stars. Herein we report
preliminary results.Comment: Proceedings of IAUS 302: Magnetic fields throughout stellar evolutio
The MiMeS Project: Overview and Current Status
The Magnetism in Massive Stars (MiMeS) Project is a consensus collaboration
among many of the foremost international researchers of the physics of hot,
massive stars, with the basic aim of understanding the origin, evolution and
impact of magnetic fields in these objects. At the time of writing, MiMeS Large
Programs have acquired over 950 high-resolution polarised spectra of about 150
individual stars with spectral types from B5-O4, discovering new magnetic
fields in a dozen hot, massive stars. The quality of this spectral and magnetic
mat\'eriel is very high, and the Collaboration is keen to connect with
colleagues capable of exploiting the data in new or unforeseen ways. In this
paper we review the structure of the MiMeS observing programs and report the
status of observations, data modeling and development of related theory.Comment: Proceedings of IAUS272: Active OB star
Attempts to measure the magnetic field of the pulsating B star Eridani
We report on attempts to measure the magnetic field of the pulsating B star
Eridani with the Musicos spectropolarimeter attached to the 2m telescope
at the Pic du Midi, France. This object is one of the most extensively studied
stars for pulsation modes, and the existence of a magnetic field was suggested
from the inequality of the frequency separations of a triplet in the stars'
oscillation spectrum. We show that the inferred 5-10 kG field was not present
during our observations, which cover about one year. We discuss the influence
of the strong pulsations on the analysis of the magnetic field strength and set
an upper limit to the effective longitudinal field strength and to the field
strength for a dipolar configuration. We also find that the observed wind line
variability is caused by the pulsations.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figures, accepted by A&
Bovine tuberculosis disturbs parasite functional trait composition in African buffalo
Novel parasites can have wide-ranging impacts, not only on host populations, but also on the resident parasite community. Historically, impacts of novel parasites have been assessed by examining pairwise interactions between parasite species. However, parasite communities are complex networks of interacting species. Here we used multivariate taxonomic and trait-based approaches to determine how parasite community composition changed when African buffalo (Syncerus caffer) acquired an emerging disease, bovine tuberculosis (BTB). Both taxonomic and functional parasite richness increased significantly in animals that acquired BTB than in those that did not. Thus, the presence of BTB seems to catalyze extraordinary shifts in community composition. There were no differences in overall parasite taxonomic composition between infected and uninfected individuals, however. The trait-based analysis revealed an increase in direct-transmitted, quickly replicating parasites following BTB infection. This study demonstrates that trait-based approaches provide insight into parasite community dynamics in the context of emerging infections
Magnetic field measurements and wind-line variability of OB-type stars
Context. The first magnetic fields in O- and B-type stars that do not belong
to the Bp-star class, have been discovered. The cyclic UV wind-line
variability, which has been observed in a significant fraction of early-type
stars, is likely to be related to such magnetic fields. Aims. We attempt to
improve our understanding of massive-star magnetic fields, and observe
twenty-five carefully-selected, OB-type stars. Methods. Of these stars we
obtain 136 magnetic field strength measurements. We present the UV wind-line
variability of all selected targets and summarise spectropolarimetric
observations acquired using the MUSICOS spectropolarimeter, mounted at the TBL,
Pic du Midi, between December 1998 and November 2004. From the average Stokes I
and V line profiles, derived using the LSD method, we measure the magnetic
field strengths, radial velocities, and first moment of the line profiles.
Results. No significant magnetic field is detected in any OB-type star that we
observed. Typical 1{\sigma} errors are between 15 and 200 G. A possible
magnetic-field detection for the O9V star 10 Lac remains uncertain, because the
field measurements depend critically on the fringe- effect correction in the
Stokes V spectra. We find excess emission in UV-wind lines, centred about the
rest wavelength, to be a new indirect indicator of the presence of a magnetic
field in early B-type stars. The most promising candidates to host magnetic
fields are the B-type stars {\delta} Cet and 6 Cep, and a number of O stars.
Conclusions. Although some O and B stars have strong dipolar field, which cause
periodic variability in the UV wind-lines, such strong fields are not
widespread. If the variability observed in the UV wind-lines of OB stars is
generally caused by surface magnetic fields, these fields are either weak
(<~few hundred G) or localised.Comment: A&A publishe
The magnetic field of the B3V star 16 Pegasi
The Slowly Pulsating B3V star 16 Pegasi was discovered by Hubrig (2006) to be
magnetic, based on low-resolution spectropolarimetric observations with FORS1
at the VLT. We have confirmed the presence of a magnetic field with new
measurements with the spectropolarimeters Narval at TBL, France and Espadons at
CFHT, Hawaii during 2007. The most likely period is about 1.44 d for the
modulation of the field, but this could not be firmly established with the
available data set. No variability has been found in the UV stellar wind lines.
Although the star was reported once to show H alpha in emission, there exists
at present no confirmation that the star is a Be star.Comment: 2 pages, 4 figures, contrubuted poster at IAU Symposium 259 "Cosmic
Magnetic Fields: from Planets, to Stars and Galaxies", Tenerife, Spain,
November 3-7, 200
Large-scale wind structures in OB supergiants: a search for rotationally modulated H\alpha variability
We present the results of a long-term monitoring campaign of the H\alpha line
in a sample of bright OB-supergiants (O7.5-B9) that aims at detecting
rotationally modulated changes potentially related to the existence of
large-scale wind structures. A total of 22 objects were monitor ed during 36
nights spread over 6 months in 2001-2002. Coordinated broad-band photometric
observations were also obtained for some targets. Conspicuous evidence for
variability in H\alpha is found for the stars displaying a feature contaminated
by wind emission. Most changes take place on a daily time-scale, although
hourly variations are also occasionally detected. Convincing evidence for a
cyclical pattern of variability in H\alpha has been found in 2 stars: HD 14134
and HD 42087 (periodic signals are also detected in other stars, but
independent confirmation is required). Rotational modulation is suggested from
the similarity between the observed recurrence time-scales (in the range 13-25
days) and estimated periods of stellar rotation. We call attention to the
atypical case of HD 14134 which exhibits a clear 12.8-d periodicity both in the
photometric and in the spectroscopic data sets. This places this object among a
handful of early-type stars where one may observe a clear link between extended
wind structures and photospheric disturbances. Further modelling may test the
hypothesis that azimuthally-extended wind streams are responsible for the
patterns of spectral variability in our target stars.Comment: 18 pages, accepted for publication in MNRA
A Magnetic Confinement Versus Rotation Classification Of Massive-Star Magnetospheres
Building on results from the Magnetism in Massive Stars (MiMeS) project, this paper shows how a two-parameter classification of massive-star magnetospheres in terms of the magnetic wind confinement (which sets the Alfvén radius RA) and stellar rotation (which sets the Kepler co-rotation radius RK) provides a useful organization of both observational signatures and theoretical predictions. We compile the first comprehensive study of inferred and observed values for relevant stellar and magnetic parameters of 64 confirmed magnetic OB stars with Teff ≳ 16 kK. Using these parameters, we locate the stars in the magnetic confinement–rotation diagram, a log–log plot of RK versus RA. This diagram can be subdivided into regimes of centrifugal magnetospheres (CM), with RA \u3e RK, versus dynamical magnetospheres (DM), with RK \u3e RA. We show how key observational diagnostics, like the presence and characteristics of Hα emission, depend on a star\u27s position within the diagram, as well as other parameters, especially the expected wind mass-loss rates. In particular, we identify two distinct populations of magnetic stars with Hα emission: namely, slowly rotating O-type stars with narrow emission consistent with a DM, and more rapidly rotating B-type stars with broader emission associated with a CM. For O-type stars, the high mass-loss rates are sufficient to accumulate enough material for line emission even within the relatively short free-fall time-scale associated with a DM: this high mass-loss rate also leads to a rapid magnetic spindown of the stellar rotation. For the B-type stars, the longer confinement of a CM is required to accumulate sufficient emitting material from their relatively weak winds, which also lead to much longer spindown time-scales. Finally, we discuss how other observational diagnostics, e.g. variability of UV wind lines or X-ray emission, relate to the inferred magnetic properties of these stars, and summarize prospects for future developments in our understanding of massive-star magnetospheres
Discovery of the magnetic field in the pulsating B star beta Cephei
Although the star itself is not He enriched, the periodicity and the
variability in the UV wind lines of the pulsating B1 IV star beta Cep are
similar to what is observed in magnetic He-peculiar B stars, suggesting that
beta Cep is magnetic. We searched for a magnetic field using
spectropolarimetry. From UV spectroscopy, we analysed the wind variability and
investigated the correlation with the magnetic data. Using 130 time-resolved
circular polarisation spectra, obtained with the MuSiCoS spectropolarimeter at
the 2m TBL from 1998 until 2005, we applied the least-squares deconvolution
method on the Stokes V spectra and derived the longitudinal component of the
integrated magnetic field over the visible hemisphere of the star. We performed
a period analysis on the magnetic data and on EW measurements of UV wind lines
obtained over 17 years. We also analysed the short- and long-term radial
velocity variations, which are due to the pulsations and the 90-year binary
motion. beta Cep hosts a sinusoidally varying magnetic field with an amplitude
97(4) G and an average value -6(3) G. From the UV wind line variability, we
derive a period of 12.00075(11) days, which is the rotation period of the star,
and is compatible with the observed magnetic modulation. Phases of maximum and
minimum field match those of maximum emission in the UV wind lines, strongly
supporting an oblique magnetic-rotator model. We discuss the magnetic behaviour
as a function of pulsation behaviour and UV line variability. This paper
presents the analysis of the first confirmed detection of a dipolar magnetic
field in an upper main-sequence pulsating star. Maximum wind absorption
originates in the magnetic equatorial plane. Maximum emission occurs when the
magnetic north pole points to the Earth. Radial velocities agree with the ~90-y
orbit around its Be-star binary companion.Comment: 14 pages, 10 figures, 5 table
Multisite spectroscopic seismic study of the beta Cep star V2052 Oph: inhibition of mixing by its magnetic field
We used extensive ground-based multisite and archival spectroscopy to derive
observational constraints for a seismic modelling of the magnetic beta Cep star
V2052 Ophiuchi. The line-profile variability is dominated by a radial mode
(f_1=7.14846 d^{-1}) and by rotational modulation (P_rot=3.638833 d). Two
non-radial low-amplitude modes (f_2=7.75603 d^{-1} and f_3=6.82308 d^{-1}) are
also detected. The four periodicities that we found are the same as the ones
discovered from a companion multisite photometric campaign (Handler et al.
2012) and known in the literature. Using the photometric constraints on the
degrees l of the pulsation modes, we show that both f_2 and f_3 are prograde
modes with (l,m)=(4,2) or (4,3). These results allowed us to deduce ranges for
the mass (M \in [8.2,9.6] M_o) and central hydrogen abundance (X_c \in
[0.25,0.32]) of V2052 Oph, to identify the radial orders n_1=1, n_2=-3 and
n_3=-2, and to derive an equatorial rotation velocity v_eq \in [71,75] km
s^{-1}. The model parameters are in full agreement with the effective
temperature and surface gravity deduced from spectroscopy. Only models with no
or mild core overshooting (alpha_ov \in [0,0.15] local pressure scale heights)
can account for the observed properties. Such a low overshooting is opposite to
our previous modelling results for the non-magnetic beta Cep star theta Oph
having very similar parameters, except for a slower surface rotation rate. We
discuss whether this result can be explained by the presence of a magnetic
field in V2052 Oph that inhibits mixing in its interior.Comment: 12 pages, 6 figures and 5 tables; accepted for publication in MNRAS
on 2012 August 1
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