About ten per cent of ‘massive’ stars (those of more than 1.5 solar masses) have strong, large-scale surface magnetic fields1,2,3. It has been suggested that merging of main-sequence and pre-main-sequence stars could produce such strong fields4,5, and the predicted fraction of merged massive stars is also about ten per cent6,7. The merger hypothesis is further supported by a lack of magnetic stars in close binaries8,9, which is as expected if mergers produce magnetic stars. Here we report three-dimensional magnetohydrodynamical simulations of the coalescence of two massive stars and follow the evolution of the merged product. Strong magnetic fields are produced in the simulations, and the merged star rejuvenates such that it appears younger...
Aims. Recent magnetic field surveys in O- and B-type stars revealed that about 10% of the core-hydro...
Magnetic fields can play an important role in stellar evolution. Among white dwarfs, the most common...
Because the majority of massive stars are born as members of close binary systems, populations of ma...
About ten per cent of ‘massive’ stars (those of more than 1.5 solar masses) have strong, large-scale...
Approximately 10 per cent of massive OBA main-sequence (MS) and pre-MS stars harbour strong, large-s...
About 10 per cent of stars more massive than ≈1.5M⊙ have strong, large-scale surface magnetic fields...
Recent MHD simulations have demonstrated that magnetic massive stars can be formed via mergers of ma...
Accepted for publication in MNRAS. A full reproduction package is shared on zenodo in accordance w...
International audience(Abridged) Context. Most massive stars are located in multiple stellar systems...
A significant fraction of massive main-sequence stars show strong, large-scale magnetic fields. The ...
Stars with mass more than 8 solar masses end their lives as neutron stars, which we mostly observe a...
Rotation is thought to be a major factor in the evolution of massive stars—especially at low metalli...
Rotation is thought to be a major factor in the evolution of massive stars—especially at low metalli...
Aims. Recent magnetic field surveys in O- and B-type stars revealed that about 10% of the core-hydro...
Magnetic fields can play an important role in stellar evolution. Among white dwarfs, the most common...
Because the majority of massive stars are born as members of close binary systems, populations of ma...
About ten per cent of ‘massive’ stars (those of more than 1.5 solar masses) have strong, large-scale...
Approximately 10 per cent of massive OBA main-sequence (MS) and pre-MS stars harbour strong, large-s...
About 10 per cent of stars more massive than ≈1.5M⊙ have strong, large-scale surface magnetic fields...
Recent MHD simulations have demonstrated that magnetic massive stars can be formed via mergers of ma...
Accepted for publication in MNRAS. A full reproduction package is shared on zenodo in accordance w...
International audience(Abridged) Context. Most massive stars are located in multiple stellar systems...
A significant fraction of massive main-sequence stars show strong, large-scale magnetic fields. The ...
Stars with mass more than 8 solar masses end their lives as neutron stars, which we mostly observe a...
Rotation is thought to be a major factor in the evolution of massive stars—especially at low metalli...
Rotation is thought to be a major factor in the evolution of massive stars—especially at low metalli...
Aims. Recent magnetic field surveys in O- and B-type stars revealed that about 10% of the core-hydro...
Magnetic fields can play an important role in stellar evolution. Among white dwarfs, the most common...
Because the majority of massive stars are born as members of close binary systems, populations of ma...