Context. The rotation period of stars is an important parameter along with mass, radius, effective temperature. It is an essential parameter for any radial velocity monitoring, as stellar activity can mimic the presence of a planet at the stellar rotation period. Several methods exist to measure it, including long sequences of photometric measurements or temporal series of stellar activity indicators. Aims. Here, we use the circular polarization in near-infrared spectral lines for a sample of 43 quiet M dwarfs and compare the measured rotation periods to those obtained with other methods. Methods. From Stokes V spectropolarimetric sequences observed with SPIRou at CFHT and the data processed with the APERO pipeline, we compute the least squares deconvolution profiles using different masks of atomic stellar lines with known Landé factor appropriate to the effective temperature of the star. We derive the longitudinal magnetic field to examine its possible variation along the 50 to 200 observations of each star. For determining the stellar rotation period, we apply a Gaussian process regression enabling us to determine the rotation period of stars with evolving longitudinal field. Res
One manifestation of dynamo action on the Sun is the 22-yr magnetic cycle, exhibiting a polarity reversal and a periodic conversion between poloidal and toroidal fields. For M dwarfs, several authors claim evidence of activity cycles from photometry and analyses of spectroscopic indices, but no clear polarity reversal has been identified from spectropolarimetric observations. Our aim is to monitor the evolution of the large-scale field of AD Leo, which has shown hints of a secular evolution from past dedicated spectropolarimetric campaigns. We analysed near-infrared spectropolarimetric observations of the active M dwarf AD Leo taken with SPIRou between 2019 and 2020 and archival optical data collected with ESPaDOnS and Narval between 2006 and 2019. We searched for long-term variability in the longitudinal field, the width of unpolarised Stokes profiles, the unsigned magnetic flux derived from Zeeman broadening, and the geometry of the large-scale magnetic field using both Zeeman-Doppler Imaging and Principal Component Analysis. We found evidence of a long-term evolution of the magnetic field, featuring a decrease in axisymmetry (from 99% to 60%). This is accompanied by a weakening
In this paper, we study six slowly rotating mid-to-late M~dwarfs (rotation period $P_{\mathrm{rot}} \approx 40-190\,\mathrm{dy}$) by analysing spectropolarimetric data collected with SPIRou at the Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope as part of the SPIRou Legacy Survey from 2019 to 2022. From $\approx$100--200 Least-Squares-Deconvolved (LSD) profiles of circularly polarised spectra of each star, we confirm the stellar rotation periods of the six M~dwarfs and explore their large-scale magnetic field topology and its evolution with time using both the method based on Principal Component Analysis (PCA) proposed recently and Zeeman-Doppler Imaging. All M~dwarfs show large-scale field variations on the time-scale of their rotation periods, directly seen from the circularly polarised LSD profiles using the PCA method. We detect a magnetic polarity reversal for the fully-convective M~dwarf GJ~1151, and a possible inversion in progress for Gl~905. The four fully-convective M~dwarfs of our small sample (Gl~905, GJ~1289, GJ~1151, GJ~1286) show a larger amount of temporal variations (mainly in field strength and axisymmetry) than the two partly-convective ones (Gl~617B, Gl~408). Surprisingly, the s
Insights on stellar surface large-scale magnetic field topologies are usually drawn by applying Zeeman-Doppler-Imaging (ZDI) to the observed spectropolarimetric time series. However, ZDI requires experience for reliable results to be reached and is based on a number of prior assumptions that may not be valid, e.g., when the magnetic topology is evolving on timescales comparable to or shorter than the time span over which observations are collected. In this paper, we present a method based on Principal Component Analysis (PCA) applied to circularly polarised (Stokes~$V$) line profiles of magnetic stars to retrieve the main characteristics of the parent large-scale magnetic topologies, like for instance, the relative strength of the poloidal and toroidal components, and the degree of axisymmetry of the dominant field component and its complexity (dipolar or more complex). We show that this method can also be used to diagnose the temporal variability of the large-scale magnetic field. Performing best for stars with moderate projected equatorial velocities hosting relatively simple magnetic field topologies, this new method is simpler than ZDI, making it convenient to rapidly diagnose
It only works for a few divisions thanks to a lot of added materials
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