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Context: Angular momentum (AM) transport models of stellar interiors require improvements to explain the strong extraction of AM from stellar cores that is observed with asteroseismology. One of the often invoked mediators of AM transport are internal magnetic fields, even though their properties, observational signatures and influence on stellar evolution are largely unknown. Aims: We study how a fossil, axisymmetric internal magnetic field affects period spacing patterns of dipolar gravity mode oscillations in main-sequence stars with masses of 1.3, 2.0 and 3.0 M$_odot$. We assess the influence of fundamental stellar parameters on the magnitude of pulsation mode frequency shifts. Methods: We compute dipolar gravity mode frequency shifts due to a fossil, axisymmetric poloidal-toroidal internal magnetic field for a grid of stellar evolution models, varying stellar fundamental parameters. Rigid rotation is taken into account using the traditional approximation of rotation and the influence of the magnetic field is computed using a perturbative approach. Results: We find magnetic signatures for dipolar gravity mode oscillations in terminal-age main-sequence stars that are measurable for a near-core field strength larger than $10^{5}$ G. The predicted signatures differ appreciably from those due to rotation. Conclusions: Our formalism demonstrates the potential for the future detection and characterization of strong fossil, axisymmetric internal magnetic fields in gravity-mode pulsators near the end of core-hydrogen burning from Kepler photometry, if such fields exist.
Aims. In this paper, we aim to measure the strength of the surface magnetic fields for a sample of five intermediate mass T Tauri stars and one low mass T Tauri star from late-F to mid-K spectral types. While magnetic fields of T Tauri stars at the l
Asteroseismology is a powerful tool for probing the internal structures of stars by using their natural pulsation frequencies. It relies on identifying sequences of pulsation modes that can be compared with theoretical models, which has been done suc
In this work, a mass-effective temperature-surface gravity relation (MTGR) is developed for main sequence stars in the range of 6400 K < $T_{rm eff}$ < 20000 K with log$g$ > 3.44. The MTGR allows the simple estimation of the masses of stars from thei
The evolution of a star is driven by the physical processes in its interior making the theory of stellar structure and evolution the most crucial ingredient for not only stellar evolution studies, but any field of astronomy which relies on the yields
Observations of pressure-gravity mixed modes, combined with a theoretical framework for understanding mode formation, can yield a wealth of information about deep stellar interiors. In this paper, we seek to develop a formalism for treating the effec