A&A 403, 693-697 (2003)
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:20030431
The survival of fossil magnetic fields during pre-main sequence evolution
D. MossDepartment of Mathematics, University of Manchester, Manchester M13 9PL, UK
(Received 24 January 2003 / Accepted 21 March 2003 )
Abstract
The origin of the strong large-scale magnetic fields found at the
surfaces of
the near-main sequence chemically peculiar (CP) stars is still a matter of
controversy. The fossil theory, in which the fields are explained as remnants
of fields present during earlier stages of stellar evolution, arguably is better able to explain the observed CP star magnetism.
However the question of whether significant
large-scale magnetic flux can survive through the pre-main sequence
evolution has been much disputed, but little explored.
Here we attempt to make some preliminary, semi-quantitative estimates
related to flux survival in the presence of large-scale convection. We also
present a simple model that attempts to quantify the fraction of flux that
can survive from the top of the Hayashi track to the main sequence.
A broad conclusion is that for plausible values of parameters such as
turbulent diffusivity, flux can more readily survive in stars of several, rather than about one, solar masses,
although the contrast is not as strong as appears to be implied
by observations.
Attention is drawn to the effects of uncertainties in modelling
pre-main sequence stellar evolution.
Key words: magnetic fields -- magnetohydrodynamics (MHD) -- stars: evolution -- stars: chemically peculiar
© ESO 2003
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