The impact of stellar metallicity on rotation and activity evolution in the Kepler field using gyro-kinematic ages

Author:

See Victor1ORCID,Lu Yuxi (Lucy)23ORCID,Amard Louis4ORCID,Roquette Julia5ORCID

Affiliation:

1. European Space Agency (ESA), European Space Research and Technology Centre (ESTEC) , Keplerlaan 1, 2201 AZ Noordwijk , The Netherlands

2. Department of Astronomy, Columbia University , 550 West 120th Street, New York, NY 10025 , USA

3. American Museum of Natural History, Central Park West , Manhattan, NY 10024 , USA

4. Département d’Astrophysique/AIM, CEA/IRFU, CNRS/INSU, Univ. Paris-Saclay & Univ. de Paris , 91191 Gif-sur-Yvette , France

5. Département d’Astronomie, Université de Genève , Chemin Pegasi 51, 1290 Versoix , Switzerland

Abstract

ABSTRACT In recent years, there has been a push to understand how chemical composition affects the magnetic activity levels of main sequence low-mass stars. Results indicate that more metal-rich stars are more magnetically active for a given stellar mass and rotation period. This metallicity dependence has implications for how the rotation periods and activity levels of low-mass stars evolve over their lifetimes. Numerical modelling suggests that at late ages more metal-rich stars should be rotating more slowly and be more magnetically active. In this work, we study the rotation and activity evolution of low-mass stars using a sample of Kepler field stars. We use the gyro-kinematic age dating technique to estimate ages for our sample and use the photometric activity index as our proxy for magnetic activity. We find clear evidence that, at late ages, more metal-rich stars have spun down to slower rotation in agreement with the theoretical modelling. However, further investigation is required to definitively determine whether the magnetic activity evolution occurs in a metallicity dependent way.

Funder

European Commission

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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