Rotation of solar analogs cross-matching Kepler and Gaia DR2 [SSA]

http://arxiv.org/abs/2006.06204


A major obstacle to interpreting the rotation period distribution for main-sequence stars from Kepler mission data has been the lack of precise evolutionary status for these objects. We address this by investigating the evolutionary status based on Gaia Data Release 2 parallaxes and photometry for more than 30,000 Kepler stars with rotation period measurements. Many of these are subgiants, and should be excluded in future work on dwarfs. We particularly investigate a 193-star sample of solar analogs, and report newly-determined rotation periods for 125 of these. These include 54 stars from a prior sample, of which can confirm the periods for 50. The remainder are new, and 10 of them longer than solar rotation period, suggesting that sun-like stars continue to spin down on the main sequence past solar age. Our sample of solar analogs could potentially serve as a benchmark for future missions such as PLATO, and emphasizes the need for additional astrometric, photometric, and spectroscopic information before interpreting the stellar populations and results from time-series surveys.

Read this paper on arXiv…

J. Jr, L. Almeida, E. Velloso, et. al.
Fri, 12 Jun 20
35/69

Comments: 10 pages, 8 Figures, 2 tables. accepted to be published on The Astrophysical Journal (June 8, 2020)