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Main Authors: Claytor, Zachary R., van Saders, Jennifer L., Cao, Lyra, Pinsonneault, Marc H., Teske, Johanna, Beaton, Rachael L.
Format: Preprint
Published: 2023
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2307.05664
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author Claytor, Zachary R.
van Saders, Jennifer L.
Cao, Lyra
Pinsonneault, Marc H.
Teske, Johanna
Beaton, Rachael L.
author_facet Claytor, Zachary R.
van Saders, Jennifer L.
Cao, Lyra
Pinsonneault, Marc H.
Teske, Johanna
Beaton, Rachael L.
contents The TESS mission delivers time-series photometry for millions of stars across the sky, offering a probe into stellar astrophysics, including rotation, on a population scale. However, light curve systematics related to the satellite's 13.7-day orbit have prevented stellar rotation searches for periods longer than 13 days, putting the majority of stars beyond reach. Machine learning methods have the ability to identify systematics and recover robust signals, enabling us to recover rotation periods up to 35 days for GK dwarfs and 80 days for M dwarfs. We present a catalog of 7245 rotation periods for cool dwarfs in the Southern Continuous Viewing Zone, estimated using convolutional neural networks. We find evidence for structure in the period distribution consistent with prior Kepler and K2 results, including a gap in 10--20-day cool star periods thought to arise from a change in stellar spin-down or activity. Using a combination of spectroscopic and gyrochronologic constraints, we fit stellar evolution models to estimate masses and ages for stars with rotation periods. We find strong correlations between the detectability of rotation in TESS and the effective temperature, age, and metallicity of the stars. Finally, we investigate the relationships between rotation and newly obtained spot filling fractions estimated from APOGEE spectra. Field star spot filling fractions are elevated in the same temperature and period regime where open clusters' magnetic braking stalls, lending support to an internal shear mechanism that can produce both phenomena.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2307_05664
institution arXiv
publishDate 2023
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle TESS Stellar Rotation up to 80 days in the Southern Continuous Viewing Zone
Claytor, Zachary R.
van Saders, Jennifer L.
Cao, Lyra
Pinsonneault, Marc H.
Teske, Johanna
Beaton, Rachael L.
Solar and Stellar Astrophysics
Earth and Planetary Astrophysics
The TESS mission delivers time-series photometry for millions of stars across the sky, offering a probe into stellar astrophysics, including rotation, on a population scale. However, light curve systematics related to the satellite's 13.7-day orbit have prevented stellar rotation searches for periods longer than 13 days, putting the majority of stars beyond reach. Machine learning methods have the ability to identify systematics and recover robust signals, enabling us to recover rotation periods up to 35 days for GK dwarfs and 80 days for M dwarfs. We present a catalog of 7245 rotation periods for cool dwarfs in the Southern Continuous Viewing Zone, estimated using convolutional neural networks. We find evidence for structure in the period distribution consistent with prior Kepler and K2 results, including a gap in 10--20-day cool star periods thought to arise from a change in stellar spin-down or activity. Using a combination of spectroscopic and gyrochronologic constraints, we fit stellar evolution models to estimate masses and ages for stars with rotation periods. We find strong correlations between the detectability of rotation in TESS and the effective temperature, age, and metallicity of the stars. Finally, we investigate the relationships between rotation and newly obtained spot filling fractions estimated from APOGEE spectra. Field star spot filling fractions are elevated in the same temperature and period regime where open clusters' magnetic braking stalls, lending support to an internal shear mechanism that can produce both phenomena.
title TESS Stellar Rotation up to 80 days in the Southern Continuous Viewing Zone
topic Solar and Stellar Astrophysics
Earth and Planetary Astrophysics
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2307.05664