26–29 May 2026
Radisson Blu Marina Palace Hotel
Europe/Helsinki timezone

Testing the reliability of magnetic field strength measurements for M dwarfs

27 May 2026, 17:45
15m
Room A

Room A

Speaker

Irene Amateis (Uppsala University)

Description

M dwarfs are the most common stars in the Galaxy and prime targets in the search for potentially habitable exoplanets. Their strong magnetic fields shape stellar atmospheres, drive winds, and critically influence the environments of orbiting planets. A reliable characterisation of these fields is therefore essential for both stellar astrophysics and planetary habitability studies.
We investigate the magnetic field properties of M dwarfs using Zeeman broadening in high-resolution spectra. By comparing commonly used diagnostic techniques with synthetic spectra generated from magnetohydrodynamic simulations, we assess their ability to recover known magnetic field strengths. We show that widely adopted methods can underestimate the total magnetic field by up to 50%, whereas an alternative approach tested in this work provides a significantly more accurate recovery of the true field strength.
These results establish quantitative benchmarks for the interpretation of M-dwarf magnetic measurements from intensity spectra and highlight important limitations of standard diagnostic assumptions. Building on this, we are applying the best-performing magnetic diagnostic methods to a sample of M dwarfs, including prominent rocky exoplanet hosts, observed with the CRIRES+ near-infrared spectrograph at the ESO Very Large Telescope.

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