MiMeS
2 Papers
4 Citations
MiMeS is an academic researcher. The author has contributed to research in topics: Magnetosphere & Equivalent width. The author has an hindex of 1, co-authored 2 publications.
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Papers
The magnetic early B-type stars – IV. Breakout or leakage? H α emission as a diagnostic of plasma transport in centrifugal magnetospheres
Matt Shultz,Stan Owocki,Th. Rivinius,Gregg A. Wade,Coralie Neiner,Evelyne Alecian,Oleg Kochukhov,David A. Bohlender,Asif ud-Doula,John D. Landstreet,John D. Landstreet,J. Sikora,Alexandre David-Uraz,Véronique Petit,P. Cerrahoğlu,R. Fine,G. Henson,MiMeS,BinaMIcS Collaborations +18 more
Abstract: Rapidly rotating early-type stars with strong magnetic fields frequently show H$\alpha$ emission originating in Centrifugal Magnetospheres (CMs), circumstellar structures in which centrifugal support due to magnetically enforced corotation of the magnetically confined plasma enables it to accumulate to high densities. It is not currently known whether the CM plasma escapes via Centrifugal Breakout (CB), or by an unidentified leakage mechanism. We have conducted the first comprehensive examination of the H$\alpha$ emission properties of all stars currently known to display CM-pattern emission. We find that the onset of emission is dependent primarily on the area of the CM, which can be predicted simply by the value $B_{\rm K}$ of the magnetic field at the Kepler corotation radius $R_{\rm K}$. Emission strength is strongly sensitive to both CM area and $B_{\rm K}$. Emission onset and strength are {\em not} dependent on effective temperature, luminosity, or mass-loss rate. These results all favour a CB scenario, however the lack of intrinsic variability in any CM diagnostics indicates that CB must be an essentially continuous process, i.e.\ it effectively acts as a leakage mechanism. We also show that the emission profile shapes are approximately scale-invariant, i.e.\ they are broadly similar across a wide range of emission strengths and stellar parameters. While the radius of maximum emission correlates closely as expected to $R_{\rm K}$, it is always larger, contradicting models that predict that emission should peak at $R_{\rm K}$.
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•Posted Content
The magnetic field and magnetosphere of Plaskett's star: A fundamental shift in our understanding of the system.
Jason Grunhut,Gregg A. Wade,C. P. Folsom,C. Neiner,Oleg Kochukhov,Evelyne Alecian,M. Shultz,Véronique Petit,MiMeS,BinaMIcS Collaborations +9 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors applied least squares deconvolution (LSD) to infer the longitudinal magnetic field from each Stokes $V$ spectrum, and used the timeseries of longitudinal field measurements, in combination with CoRoT photometry and equivalent width measurements of magnetospheric spectral lines, to estimate the rotation period of the magnetic star.
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