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A&A 405, 223-226 (2003)
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:20030550
The magnetic field of the
Lyrae system:
Orbital and longer time-scale variability
F. Leone1, S. I. Plachinda2, G. Umana3, C. Trigilio3 and M. Skulsky4
1 INAF - Osservatorio Astrofisico di Catania, Città Universitaria, 95125 Catania, Italy
2 Crimean Astrophysical Observatory, Nauchny, Crimea, 334413, Ukraine and Isaac Newton Institute of Chile, Crimean Branch
3 Istituto di Radioastronomia del C.N.R., Stazione VLBI di Noto, C.P. 161 Noto, Italy
4 Lviv Polytechnic University, 79013 Lviv, Ukraine
(Received 31 January 2003 / Accepted 25 March 2003)
Abstract
The presence of a magnetic field in
Lyrae was firstly suggested by
Babcock in 1958 and then confirmed by Skulsky in 1982. This
kG-order large-scale organized magnetic field has been neglected
in interpreting and modeling the large variety of phenomena presented by
Lyrae.
Here, we present circular spectropolarimetry of
Lyrae showing that
its magnetic field is variable with the orbital period and that
it has changed in sign and strength between 1980 and 2000.
Unfortunately, there are not enough data to conclude if a
longer-time variability is super-imposed on the orbital period
variability or if the field changes
abruptly.
This magnetic field, to our knowledge, is unique. Since we
measured the magnetic field in metal lines of the brightest star
of the system, we can conclude that this is the first
magnetic
B-type giant star. In this case, the magnetic field is
significantly different from that of Magnetic Chemically Peculiar
stars and the long-time-scale variability suggests the presence of
a dynamo. However, we cannot rule out that the magnetic
field measured on the brightest star is generated by the accretion
disk, or that the magnetic field of the embedded star is so
elongated in the orbital plane by the disk
that it still has a significant strength even at the companion distance.
In any case, the accretion disk is certainly related to the
magnetic field of the
Lyrae system. We found that variations of the field
in sign and strength corresponded to variations in the disk
structure, as it is inferred from photometry and spectroscopy.
Also, a magnetized disk explains the observed jet-like outflow
from the
Lyrae system.
Key words: stars: individual: HD 174638 -- stars: magnetic fields -- stars: binaries: spectroscopic -- stars: binaries: eclipsing -- stars: chemically peculiar
Offprint request: F. Leone, fleone@ct.astro.it
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