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The quest for magnetic massive stars in the Magellanic Clouds

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 July 2017

Y. Nazé
Affiliation:
FNRS/Univ. Liège, Belgium
S. Bagnulo
Affiliation:
Armagh Obs., Ireland
N. R. Walborn
Affiliation:
STScI, USA
N. Morrell
Affiliation:
LCO, Chile
G. A. Wade
Affiliation:
RMC, Canada
M. K. Szymanski
Affiliation:
Warsaw Univ., Poland
R. H. D. Townsend
Affiliation:
Univ. Wisconsin-Madison, USA
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Abstract

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The Of?p category was introduced more than 40 years ago to gather several Galactic stars with some odd properties. Since 2000, spectropolarimetry, high-resolution spectroscopy, long-term photometry, and X-ray observations have revealed their nature: magnetic oblique rotators - they all have magnetic fields that confine their winds. Several Of?p stars have now been detected in the Magellanic Clouds, likely the prototypes of magnetic massive stars at low metallicity. This contribution will present the most recent photometric, spectroscopic, and spectropolarimetric data, along with the first modeling of these objects.

Type
Contributed Papers
Copyright
Copyright © International Astronomical Union 2017 

References

Nazé, Y., Walborn, N. R., Morrell, N., Wade, G. A. & Szymanski, M. K., 2015, A&A, 577, A107 Google Scholar
Walborn, N. R., Morrell, N. I., Nazé, Y., et al. 2015, AJ, 150, 99 Google Scholar