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Thursday, October 15, 2015
4:00 PM - 5:00 PM
East Bridge 201 (Richard P. Feynman Lecture Hall)

Physics Research Conference

The powerful magnetic fields of red giant stars
Jim Fuller, Postdoctoral Scholar in the TAPIR Group, Caltech,

Internal stellar magnetic fields are inaccessible to direct observations and little is known about their amplitude, geometry and evolution. I will discuss how strong magnetic fields in the cores of red giant stars can be identified using asteroseismology, which measures the frequencies and amplitudes of stellar pulsations. Strong fields deep inside red giants manifest themselves via depressed dipolar stellar oscillation modes, which arises from a magnetic greenhouse effect that scatters and traps oscillation mode energy within the core of the star. The Kepler satellite has already observed hundreds of these red giants, which must have core field strengths larger than roughly 10^5 G. In one case, a core field strength of 10^7 G can be measured. Strong core fields are present in roughly 50% of stars above 1.5 solar masses, suggesting that the skeletonized remnants of dynamo-generated fields are common within these stars. Strong core fields are nearly absent in stars less than 1.2 solar masses, indicating that Sun-like stars do not harbor strong fields within their cores.

 

For more information, please contact Sheri Stoll by phone at 395-6608 or by email at [email protected] or visit http://pmaweb.caltech.edu/~physcoll/PhysColl.html.