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- SPIRou reveals unusually strong magnetic fields of slowly rotating M dwarfs doi link

Auteur(s): Lehmann L. t., Donati J. -f., Fouque P., Moutou C., Bellotti S., Delfosse X., Petit P., Carmona A., Morin J., Vidotto A. a., Consortium The sls

(Article) Publié: Monthly Notices Of The Royal Astronomical Society, vol. 527 p.4330–4352 (2024)
Texte intégral en Openaccess : arXiv


Ref Arxiv: 2311.05039
DOI: 10.1093/mnras/stad3472
Ref. & Cit.: NASA ADS
Résumé:

In this paper, we study six slowly rotating mid-to-late M~dwarfs (rotation period $P_{\mathrm{rot}} \approx 40-190\,\mathrm{dy}$) by analysing spectropolarimetric data collected with SPIRou at the Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope as part of the SPIRou Legacy Survey from 2019 to 2022. From $\approx$100--200 Least-Squares-Deconvolved (LSD) profiles of circularly polarised spectra of each star, we confirm the stellar rotation periods of the six M~dwarfs and explore their large-scale magnetic field topology and its evolution with time using both the method based on Principal Component Analysis (PCA) proposed recently and Zeeman-Doppler Imaging. All M~dwarfs show large-scale field variations on the time-scale of their rotation periods, directly seen from the circularly polarised LSD profiles using the PCA method. We detect a magnetic polarity reversal for the fully-convective M~dwarf GJ~1151, and a possible inversion in progress for Gl~905. The four fully-convective M~dwarfs of our small sample (Gl~905, GJ~1289, GJ~1151, GJ~1286) show a larger amount of temporal variations (mainly in field strength and axisymmetry) than the two partly-convective ones (Gl~617B, Gl~408). Surprisingly, the six M~dwarfs show large-scale field strengths in the range between 20 to 200\,G similar to those of M~dwarfs rotating significantly faster. Our findings imply that the large-scale fields of very slowly rotating M~dwarfs are likely generated through dynamo processes operating in a different regime than those of the faster rotators that have been magnetically characterized so far.



Commentaires: 16 pages, 35 figures, published in MNRAS