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Featured researches published by V. Petit.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2016

The MiMeS survey of magnetism in massive stars: introduction and overview

G. A. Wade; C. Neiner; E. Alecian; J. Grunhut; V. Petit; B. de Batz; David A. Bohlender; David H. Cohen; Huib F. Henrichs; Oleg Kochukhov; J. D. Landstreet; Nadine Manset; F. Martins; S. Mathis; M. E. Oksala; Stanley P. Owocki; Th. Rivinius; M. Shultz; J. O. Sundqvist; R. H. D. Townsend; Asif ud-Doula; J.-C. Bouret; J. Braithwaite; Maryline Briquet; Alex C. Carciofi; A. David-Uraz; C. P. Folsom; A. W. Fullerton; B. Leroy; W. L. F. Marcolino

The Magnetism in Massive Stars (MiMeS) survey represents a highprecision systematic search for magnetic fields in hot, massive OB stars. To date, MiMeS Large Programs (ESPaDOnS@CFHT, Narval@TBL, [email protected]) and associated PI programs (FORS@VLT) have yielded nearly 1200 circular spectropolarimetric observations of over 350 OB stars. Within this sample, 20 stars are detected as magnetic. Follow-up observations of new detections reveals (i) a large diversity of magnetic properties, (ii) ubiquitous evidence for magnetic wind confinement in optical spectra of all magnetic O stars, and (iii) the presence of strong, organized magnetic fields in all known Galactic Of?p stars, and iv) a complete absence of magnetic fields in classical Be stars.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2017

The MiMeS survey of Magnetism in Massive Stars: magnetic analysis of the O-type stars

J. Grunhut; G. A. Wade; C. Neiner; M. E. Oksala; V. Petit; E. Alecian; D. Bohlender; J.-C. Bouret; Huib F. Henrichs; G. A. J. Hussain; Oleg Kochukhov

We present the analysis performed on spectropolarimetric data of 97 O-type targets included in the framework of the Magnetism in Massive Stars (MiMeS) Survey. Mean least-squares deconvolved Stokes I and V line profiles were extracted for each observation, from which we measured the radial velocity, rotational and non-rotational broadening velocities, and longitudinal magnetic field Bl. The investigation of the Stokes I profiles led to the discovery of two new multiline spectroscopic systems (HD 46106, HD 204827) and confirmed the presence of a suspected companion in HD 37041. We present a modified strategy of the least-squares deconvolution technique aimed at optimizing the detection of magnetic signatures while minimizing the detection of spurious signatures in Stokes V. Using this analysis, we confirm the detection of a magnetic field in six targets previously reported as magnetic by the MiMeS collaboration (HD 108, HD 47129A2, HD 57682, HD 148937, CPD-28 2561, and NGC 1624-2), as well as report the presence of signal in Stokes V in three new magnetic candidates (HD 36486, HD 162978, and HD 199579). Overall, we find a magnetic incidence rate of 7 ± 3 per cent, for 108 individual O stars (including all O-type components part of multiline systems), with a median uncertainty of the Bl measurements of about 50 G. An inspection of the data reveals no obvious biases affecting the incidence rate or the preference for detecting magnetic signatures in the magnetic stars. Similar to A- and B-type stars, we find no link between the stars’ physical properties (e.g. Teff, mass, and age) and the presence of a magnetic field. However, the Of?p stars represent a distinct class of magnetic O-type stars.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2016

Evidence of magnetic field decay in massive main-sequence stars

L. Fossati; F. R. N. Schneider; N. Castro; N. Langer; S. Simón-Díaz; Aline Muller; A. de Koter; Thierry Morel; V. Petit; H. Sana; G. A. Wade

A significant fraction of massive main-sequence stars show strong, large-scale magnetic fields. The origin of these fields, their lifetimes, and their role in shaping the characteristics and evolution of massive stars are currently not well understood. We compile a catalogue of 389 massive main-sequence stars, 61 of which are magnetic, and derive their fundamental parameters and ages. The two samples contain stars brighter than magnitude 9 in the V-band and range in mass between 5 and 100 M⊙. We find that the fractional main-sequence age distribution of all considered stars follows what is expected for a magnitude limited sample, while that of magnetic stars shows a clear decrease towards the end of the main sequence. This dearth of old magnetic stars is independent of the choice of adopted stellar evolution tracks, and appears to become more prominent when considering only the most massive stars. We show that the decreasing trend in the distribution is significantly stronger than expected from magnetic flux conservation. We also find that binary rejuvenation and magnetic suppression of core convection are unlikely to be responsible for the observed lack of older magnetic massive stars, and conclude that its most probable cause is the decay of the magnetic field, over a time span longer than the stellar lifetime for the lowest considered masses, and shorter for the highest masses. We then investigate the spin-down ages of the slowly rotating magnetic massive stars and find them to exceed the stellar ages by far in many cases. The high fraction of very slowly rotating magnetic stars thus provides an independent argument for a decay of the magnetic fields.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2015

Detection of 610-MHz radio emission from hot magnetic stars

P. Chandra; G. A. Wade; Jon O. Sundqvist; Divya Oberoi; J. Grunhut; Asif ud-Doula; V. Petit; David H. Cohen; M. E. Oksala; A. David-Uraz

We have carried out a study of radio emission from a small sample of magnetic O- and Btype stars using the Giant Metrewave Radio Telescope, with the goal of investigating their magnetospheres at low frequencies. These are the lowest frequency radio measurements ever obtained of hot magnetic stars. The observations were taken at random rotational phases in the 1390 and the 610 MHz bands. Out of the 8 stars, we detect five B-type stars in both the 1390 and the 610 MHz bands. The O-type stars were observed only in the 1390 MHz band, and no detections were obtained. We explain this result as a consequence of free-free absorption by the free-flowing stellar wind exterior to the c losed magnetosphere. We also study the variability of individual stars. One star - HD 1338 80 - exhibits remarkably strong and rapid variability of its low frequency flux density. We discu ss the possibility of this emission being coherent emission as reported for CU Vir by Trigilio et al. (2000).


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2017

Possible pair-instability supernovae at solar metallicity from magnetic stellar progenitors

Cyril Georgy; Georges Meynet; Sylvia Ekström; G. A. Wade; V. Petit; Zsolt Keszthelyi; Raphael Hirschi

Near-solar metallicity (and low-redshift) Pair-Instability Supernova (PISN) candidates challenge stellar evolution models. Indeed, at such a metallicity, even an initially very massive star generally loses so much mass by stellar winds that it will avoid the electron-positron pair-creation instability. We use recent results showing that a magnetic field at the surface of a massive star can significantly reduce its effective mass-loss rate to compute magnetic models of very massive stars (VMSs) at solar metallicity and explore the possibility that such stars end as PISNe. We implement the quenching of the mass loss produced by a surface dipolar magnetic field into the Geneva stellar evolution code and compute new stellar models with an initial mass of


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2015

X-ray emission from the giant magnetosphere of the magnetic O-type star NGC 1624-2

V. Petit; David H. Cohen; G. A. Wade; Yaël Nazé; Stanley P. Owocki; Jon O. Sundqvist; Asif ud-Doula; A. W. Fullerton; Maurice A. Leutenegger; Marc Gagne

200\,M_\odot


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2014

Modulated X-ray emission of the magnetic O8.5V-star Tr16-22

Yaël Nazé; G. A. Wade; V. Petit

at solar metallicity, with and without rotation. It considerably reduces the total amount of mass lost by the star during its life. For the non-rotating model, the total (CO-core) mass of the models is


arXiv: Solar and Stellar Astrophysics | 2014

The BinaMIcS project: understanding the origin of magnetic fields in massive stars through close binary systems

E. Alecian; C. Neiner; G. A. Wade; S. Mathis; D. Bohlender; D. Cébron; C. Folsom; J. Grunhut; J.-B. Le Bouquin; V. Petit; H. Sana; A. Tkachenko; A. ud-Doula

72.8\,M_\odot


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2017

HD 164492C: a rapidly rotating, Hα-bright, magnetic early B star associated with a 12.5 d spectroscopic binary

G. A. Wade; M. Shultz; J. Sikora; M. É. Bernier; Th. Rivinius; E. Alecian; V. Petit; J. Grunhut

(


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2010

Discovery of the first tau Sco analogues: HD 66665 and HD 63425

V. Petit; G. A. Wade; W. L. F. Marcolino; Richard Ignace; Derck L. Massa

70.1\,M_\odot

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G. A. Wade

Royal Military College of Canada

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Asif ud-Doula

Penn State Worthington Scranton

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J. Grunhut

European Southern Observatory

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R. H. D. Townsend

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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C. Neiner

PSL Research University

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W. L. F. Marcolino

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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M. E. Oksala

PSL Research University

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