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HR 5907: Discovery of the most rapidly rotating magnetic B-type star by the MiMeS Collaboration

Authors :
Grunhut, J. H.
Rivinius, Th.
Wade, G. A.
Townsend, R. H. D.
Marcolino, W. L. F.
Bohlender, D. A.
Szeifert, Th.
Petit, V.
Matthews, J. M.
Rowe, J. F.
Moffat, A. F. J.
Kallinger, T.
Kuschnig, R.
Guenther, B. D.
Rucinski, S. M.
Sasselov, D.
Weiss, W. W.
Collaboration, the MiMeS
Publication Year :
2011

Abstract

We report the discovery and analysis of a very strong magnetic field in the rapidly rotating early B-type star HR 5907, based on observations obtained as part of the Magnetism in Massive Stars (MiMeS) project. We infer a rotation period of 0.508276 +0.000015/-0.000012 d from photometric and H{\alpha} EW measurements, making this the shortest period, non-degenerate, magnetic massive star known to date. From the comparison of IUE UV and optical spectroscopy with LTE BRUCE/KYLIE models we find a solid-angle integrated, uniform black-body temperature of 17 000 \pm 1000 K, a projected rotational velocity of 290 \pm 10 km/s, an equatorial radius of 3.1 \pm 0.2 R_sun, a stellar mass of 5.5 \pm 0.5 M_sun, and an inclination angle of the rotation axis to our line-of-sight of 70 \pm 10\circ. Our measurements of the longitudinal magnetic field, which vary between -500 and -2000 G, phase coherently with the rotation period and imply a surface dipole field strength of \sim15.7 kG. On the other hand, from fits to mean Least-Squares Deconvolved Stokes V line profiles we infer a dipole field strength of \sim10.4 kG. This disagreement may result from a magnetic configuration more complex than our model, and/or from the non-uniform helium surface abundance distribution. In either case we obtain a magnetic obliquity nearly aligned with the rotation axis ({\beta} = 7+2/-1\circ). Our optical spectroscopy also shows weak variability in carbon, silicon and nitrogen lines. The emission variability in hydrogen Balmer and Paschen lines indicates the presence of a dense, highly structured magnetosphere, interpreted as a centrifugally supported, magnetically confined circumstellar disk.<br />Comment: 19 pages, 17 figures (highly compressed), 3 tables, accepted for publication by MNRAS

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1109.3157
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2966.2011.19824.x