scholarly journals Photometric Variations of Solar Type Stars

1994 ◽  
Vol 143 ◽  
pp. 109-116
Author(s):  
Richard R. Radick

High precision measurements of photometric variability among solar type stars have now been made since 1980. These observations clearly show that year-to-year brightness variations connected with magnetic activity are a widespread phenomenon among such stars. They also suggest that the Sun’s potential for long-term white light variability may be significantly understated by measurements of solar total irradiance during the 1980s.

1991 ◽  
Vol 130 ◽  
pp. 353-369 ◽  
Author(s):  
Douglas S. Hall

AbstractSpottedness, as evidenced by photometric variability in 277 late-type binary and single stars, is found to occur when the Rossby number is less than about 2/3. This holds true when the convective turnover time versus B–V relation of Gilliland is used for dwarfs and also for subgiants and giants if their turnover times are twice and four times longer, respectively, than for dwarfs. Differential rotation is found correlated with rotation period (rapidly rotating stars approaching solid-body rotation) and also with lobe-filling factor (the differential rotation coefficient k is 2.5 times larger for F = 0 than F = 1). Also reviewed are latitude extent of spottedness, latitude drift during a solar-type cycle, sector structure and preferential longitudes, starspot lifetimes, and the many observational manifestations of magnetic cycles.


2019 ◽  
Vol 628 ◽  
pp. A41 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. Pizzocaro ◽  
B. Stelzer ◽  
E. Poretti ◽  
S. Raetz ◽  
G. Micela ◽  
...  

The relation between magnetic activity and rotation in late-type stars provides fundamental information on stellar dynamos and angular momentum evolution. Rotation-activity studies found in the literature suffer from inhomogeneity in the measurement of activity indexes and rotation periods. We overcome this limitation with a study of the X-ray emitting, late-type main-sequence stars observed by XMM-Newton and Kepler. We measured rotation periods from photometric variability in Kepler light curves. As activity indicators, we adopted the X-ray luminosity, the number frequency of white-light flares, the amplitude of the rotational photometric modulation, and the standard deviation in the Kepler light curves. The search for X-ray flares in the light curves provided by the EXTraS (Exploring the X-ray Transient and variable Sky) FP-7 project allows us to identify simultaneous X-ray and white-light flares. A careful selection of the X-ray sources in the Kepler field yields 102 main-sequence stars with spectral types from A to M. We find rotation periods for 74 X-ray emitting main-sequence stars, 20 of which do not have period reported in the previous literature. In the X-ray activity-rotation relation, we see evidence for the traditional distinction of a saturated and a correlated part, the latter presenting a continuous decrease in activity towards slower rotators. For the optical activity indicators the transition is abrupt and located at a period of ~10 d but it can be probed only marginally with this sample, which is biased towards fast rotators due to the X-ray selection. We observe seven bona-fide X-ray flares with evidence for a white-light counterpart in simultaneous Kepler data. We derive an X-ray flare frequency of ~0.15 d−1, consistent with the optical flare frequency obtained from the much longer Kepler time-series.


2018 ◽  
Vol 13 (S340) ◽  
pp. 225-228
Author(s):  
A. R. G. Santos ◽  
T. L. Campante ◽  
W. J. Chaplin ◽  
M. S. Cunha ◽  
M. N. Lund ◽  
...  

AbstractThe properties of the acoustic modes are sensitive to magnetic activity. The unprecedented long-term Kepler photometry, thus, allows stellar magnetic cycles to be studied through asteroseismology. We search for signatures of magnetic cycles in the seismic data of Kepler solar-type stars. We find evidence for periodic variations in the acoustic properties of about half of the 87 analysed stars. In these proceedings, we highlight the results obtained for two such stars, namely KIC 8006161 and KIC 5184732.


2012 ◽  
Vol 8 (S294) ◽  
pp. 471-475
Author(s):  
I. Boisse ◽  
M. Oshagh ◽  
C. Lovis ◽  
N. C. Santos ◽  
X. Dumusque ◽  
...  

AbstractMost of the exoplanet science is dependent on the stellar knowledge. One of them that has to be understood is the magnetic activity when we search for planets with radial velocity or photometry measurements. The main shape of stellar activity and spots properties have to be understood, for example, to choose the best targets to search for low-mass planets in the habitable zone or to derive the accurate parameters of a planetary system. With that aim, we show in this presentation how these studies lead to give clues on spots latitudes and on the long term variation of stellar activity. The properties of magnetic activity on the low rotators solar-type stars are not easily reachable by other techniques (spectropolarimetry or Doppler imaging) and these studies should be used to constrain theories of stellar dynamo.


2020 ◽  
Vol 644 ◽  
pp. A2
Author(s):  
R. V. Ibañez Bustos ◽  
A. P. Buccino ◽  
S. Messina ◽  
A. F. Lanza ◽  
P. J. D. Mauas

Aims. Recently, new debates about the role of layers of strong shear have emerged in stellar dynamo theory. Further information on the long-term magnetic activity of fully convective stars could help determine whether their underlying dynamo could sustain activity cycles similar to the solar one. Methods. We performed a thorough study of the short- and long-term magnetic activity of the young active dM4 star Gl 729. First, we analyzed long-cadence K2 photometry to characterize its transient events (e.g., flares) and global and surface differential rotation. Then, from the Mount Wilson S-indexes derived from CASLEO spectra and other public observations, we analyzed its long-term activity between 1998 and 2020 with four different time-domain techniques to detect cyclic patterns. Finally, we explored the chromospheric activity at different heights with simultaneous measurements of the Hα and the Na I D indexes, and we analyzed their relations with the S-Index. Results. We found that the cumulative flare frequency follows a power-law distribution with slope ~−0.73 for the range 1032–1034 erg. We obtained Prot = (2.848 ± 0.001) days, and we found no evidence of differential rotation. We also found that this young active star presents a long-term activity cycle with a length of about 4 yr; there is less significant evidence of a shorter cycle of 0.8 yr. The star also shows a broad activity minimum between 1998 and 2004. We found a correlation between the S index, on the one hand, and the Hα the Na I D indexes, on the other hand, although the saturation level of these last two indexes is not observed in the Ca lines. Conclusions. Because the maximum-entropy spot model does not reflect migration between active longitudes, this activity cycle cannot be explained by a solar-type dynamo. It is probably caused by an α2-dynamo.


2019 ◽  
Vol 621 ◽  
pp. A126 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. Díez Alonso ◽  
J. A. Caballero ◽  
D. Montes ◽  
F. J. de Cos Juez ◽  
S. Dreizler ◽  
...  

Aims. The main goal of this work is to measure rotation periods of the M-type dwarf stars being observed by the CARMENES exoplanet survey to help distinguish radial-velocity signals produced by magnetic activity from those produced by exoplanets. Rotation periods are also fundamental for a detailed study of the relation between activity and rotation in late-type stars. Methods. We look for significant periodic signals in 622 photometric time series of 337 bright, nearby M dwarfs obtained by long-time baseline, automated surveys (MEarth, ASAS, SuperWASP, NSVS, Catalina, ASAS-SN, K2, and HATNet) and for 20 stars which we obtained with four 0.2–0.8 m telescopes at high geographical latitudes. Results. We present 142 rotation periods (73 new) from 0.12 d to 133 d and ten long-term activity cycles (six new) from 3.0 a to 11.5 a. We compare our determinations with those in the existing literature; we investigate the distribution of Prot in the CARMENES input catalogue, the amplitude of photometric variability, and their relation to v sini and pEW(Hα); and we identify three very active stars with new rotation periods between 0.34 d and 23.6 d.


2015 ◽  
Vol 11 (A29A) ◽  
pp. 365-371
Author(s):  
Mark S. Giampapa

AbstractThe joint variability of chromospheric emission with the integrated flux in the Kepler visible band for the Sun as a star is examined. No correlation between our Ca II K line parameter and the Kepler passband is seen, suggesting that visible-band variability in solar-like stars is mostly independent of solar-like chromospheric activity. However, the K-line parameter time series and the total solar flux in the infrared K band appear weakly correlated, reflecting the wavelength dependence of the relationship between magnetic activity and broadband variability. We then apply a schematic, three-component model as a framework for the discussion of stellar photometric variability as observed by Kepler. The model confirms that spots tend to dominate stellar photometric variability in the visible though interesting cases do emerge where the facular disk coverage may become important in determining the amplitude of broadband variability.


2016 ◽  
Vol 12 (S328) ◽  
pp. 152-158 ◽  
Author(s):  
Raissa Estrela ◽  
Adriana Valio

AbstractObservations of various solar-type stars along decades showed that they could have magnetic cycles, just like our Sun. These observations yield a relation between the rotation period Prot and the cycle length Pcycle of these stars. Two distinct branches for the cycling stars were identified: active and inactive, classified according to stellar activity level and rotation rate. In this work, we determined the magnetic activity cycle for 6 active stars observed by the Kepler telescope. The method adopted here estimates the activity from the excess in the residuals of the transit light curves. This excess is obtained by subtracting a spotless model transit from the light curve, and then integrating over all the residuals during the transit. The presence of long term periodicity is estimated from the analysis of a Lomb-Scargle periodogram of the complete time series. Finally, we investigate the rotation-cycle period relation for the stars analysed here.


1999 ◽  
Vol 170 ◽  
pp. 154-161 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Kürster ◽  
A. P. Hatzes ◽  
W. D. Cochran ◽  
K. Dennerl ◽  
S. Döbereiner ◽  
...  

AbstractResults are presented from the first five years of the high precision RV survey carried out with the 1.4m CAT+CES spectrograph at ESO La Silla. This RV survey of 37 solar-type stars was begun in Nov. 1992. Using an iodine gas absorption cell for self-calibration we currently achieve a long-term precision of 20 m/s in a 30-min exposure of a 5.5 mag star. This value is the typical ‘working’ precision in survey work, i.e. an average over all observing conditions.We present the RV data for our most variable star, ι Hor (G0V), with a possible periodicity of 600 d that could imply a companion of minimum mass m sin i = 2.0 MJup. However, these data are severely complicated by stellar activity to which a large part of the variability must be attributed. Our RV data for ϕ2 Pav (F8V) contain a possible period of 43 d which would imply a planet with m sin i = 0.69 MJup. It must be stressed that for both stars the significance of the periods is still insufficient to conclude that planets are indeed orbiting them. We also show our data for a Hipparcos astrometric brown dwarf candidate, GJ 570A, that do not confirm expectations for a correspondingly high RV signal. Longer monitoring of the star is required in order to confirm a possible low amplitude variation.


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