Finding magnetic north: an extraordinary magnetic field detection in Polaris and first results of a magnetic survey of classical Cepheids
Abstract
Classical Cepheids are essential objects in the study of stellar evolution and cosmology; however, we know little about their magnetic properties. We report the detection of Stokes V features interpreted as Zeeman signatures in four classical Cepheids using high-resolution spectropolarimetric observations obtained with ESPaDOnS at CFHT. Eight observations of η Aql were acquired in 2017 covering its 7.2 d pulsation period, and single observations of Polaris, ζ Gem, δ Cep and RT Aur were obtained in 2020 as part of our ongoing systematic survey. We use mean circular polarization Stokes V profiles generated using the Least-Squares Deconvolution procedure to diagnose Zeeman signatures and measure mean longitudinal field strengths Bz. We detect magnetic signatures across all pulsation phases of η Aql (-0.890.47 G\,< Bz<1.27 0.40 G), as well as in the single observations of Polaris (0.590.16 G), ζ Gem (0.410.16 G) and δ Cep (0.430.19 G). The Stokes V profile of Polaris is detected at extremely high S/N and implies a complex magnetic field topology. It stands in stark contrast to all other detected Stokes V profiles, which show unusual approximately unipolar positive circular polarization lobes analogous to those observed in some Am stars.
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