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A&A 500, L41-L44 (2009)
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361/200911996
Letter
First evidence of a magnetic field on Vega
Towards a new class of magnetic A-type stars
F. Lignières1, 2, P. Petit1, 2, T. Böhm1, 2, and M. Aurière1, 21 Université de Toulouse, UPS, Laboratoire d'Astrophysique de Toulouse-Tarbes (LATT), 31400 Toulouse, France
e-mail: ligniere@ast.obs-mip.fr
2 CNRS, Laboratoire d'Astrophysique de Toulouse-Tarbes (LATT), 31400 Toulouse, France
Received 6 March 2009 / Accepted 27 April 2009
Abstract
We report the detection of a magnetic field on
Vega
through spectropolarimetric observations. We acquired 257 Stokes V, high signal-to-noise and high-resolution echelle spectra during four consecutive nights with the NARVAL spectropolarimeter at the 2-m Telescope Bernard Lyot of Observatoire du Pic du Midi (France). A circularly polarized signal in line profiles is unambiguously detected after combining the contribution of about 1200 spectral lines for each
spectrum and summing the signal over the 257 spectra. Due to the low amplitude of the polarized signal, various tests have been performed to discard the possibility of a spurious polarized signal. They all point towards a stellar origin of the polarized signal. Interpreting this polarization as a Zeeman signature leads to a value of -0.6
0.3 G for the disk-averaged line-of-sight
component of the surface magnetic field. This is the first strong evidence of a magnetic field in an A-type star which is not an Ap chemically peculiar star. Moreover, this longitudinal magnetic field is smaller by about two orders of magnitude than the longitudinal magnetic field (taken at its maximum phase) of the most weakly magnetic Ap stars. Magnetic fields similar to the
Vega
magnetic field could be present but still undetected in many other A-type stars.
Key words: stars: magnetic fields -- stars: early-type -- stars: individual: Vega
© ESO 2009
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