A New Asteroseismic Kepler Benchmark Constrains the Onset of Weakened Magnetic Braking in Mature Sun-like Stars

Author:

Bhalotia VanshreeORCID,Huber DanielORCID,van Saders Jennifer L.ORCID,Metcalfe Travis S.ORCID,Stassun Keivan G.ORCID,White Timothy R.ORCID,Aguirre Børsen-Koch VíctorORCID,Ball Warrick H.ORCID,Basu SarbaniORCID,Serenelli Aldo M.ORCID,Sawczynec EricaORCID,Guzik Joyce A.ORCID,Howard Andrew W.ORCID,Isaacson HowardORCID

Abstract

Abstract Stellar spin down is a critical yet poorly understood component of stellar evolution. In particular, results from the Kepler Mission imply that mature age, solar-type stars have inefficient magnetic braking, resulting in a stalled spin-down rate. However, a large number of precise asteroseismic ages are needed for mature (≥3 Gyr) stars in order to probe the regime where traditional and stalled spin-down models differ. In this paper, we present a new asteroseismic benchmark star for gyrochronology discovered using reprocessed Kepler short cadence data. KIC 11029516 (Papayu) is a bright (Kp = 9.6 mag) solar-type star with a well-measured rotation period (21.1 ± 0.8 days) from spot modulation using 4 yr of Kepler long-cadence data. We combine asteroseismology and spectroscopy to obtain T eff = 5888 ± 100 K, [Fe/H] = 0.30 ± 0.06 dex, M = 1.24 ± 0.05 M , R = 1.34 ± 0.02 R , and age of 4.0 ± 0.4 Gyr, making Papayu one of the most similar stars to the Sun in terms of temperature and radius with an asteroseismic age and a rotation period measured from spot modulation. We find that Papayu sits at the transition of where traditional and weakened spin-down models diverge. A comparison with stars of similar zero-age main-sequence temperatures supports previous findings that weakened spin-down models are required to explain the ages and rotation periods of old solar-type stars.

Funder

NASA ∣ NASA Headquarters

Alfred P. Sloan Foundation

Department of Education and Training ∣ Australian Research Council

National Science Foundation

Publisher

American Astronomical Society

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