The initial success of the Rigidly Rotating Magnetosphere (RRM) model
application to the B2Vp star sigma OriE by Townsend, Owocki & Groote (2005)
triggered a renewed era of observational monitoring of this archetypal object.
We utilize high-resolution spectropolarimetry and the magnetic Doppler imaging
(MDI) technique to simultaneously determine the magnetic configuration, which
is predominately dipolar, with a polar strength Bd = 7.3-7.8 kG and a smaller
non-axisymmetric quadrupolar contribution, as well as the surface distribution
of abundance of He, Fe, C, and Si. We describe a revised RRM model that now
accepts an arbitrary surface magnetic field configuration, with the field
topology from the MDI models used as input. The resulting synthetic Ha emission
and broadband photometric observations generally agree with observations,
however, several features are poorly fit. To explore the possibility of a
photospheric contribution to the observed photometric variability, the MDI
abundance maps were used to compute a synthetic photospheric light curve to
determine the effect of the surface inhomogeneities. Including the computed
photospheric brightness modulation fails to improve the agreement between the
observed and computed photometry. We conclude that the discrepancies cannot be
explained as an effect of inhomogeneous surface abundance. Analysis of the UV
light variability shows good agreement between observed variability and
computed light curves, supporting the accuracy of the photospheric light
variation calculation. We thus conclude that significant additional physics is
necessary for the RRM model to acceptably reproduce observations of not only
sigma Ori E, but also other similar stars with significant stellar
wind-magnetic field interactions.Comment: 16 pages, 17 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA