Transition of latitudinal differential rotation as a possible cause of weakened magnetic braking of solar-type stars [SSA]

http://arxiv.org/abs/2211.13522


We investigate the role of latitudinal differential rotation (DR) in the spin evolution of solar-type stars. Recent asteroseismic observation detected the strong equator-fast DR in some solar-type stars. Numerical simulations show that the strong equator-fast DR is a typical feature of young fast-rotating stars and that this tendency is gradually reduced with stellar age. Incorporating these properties, we develop a model for the long-term evolution of stellar rotation. The magnetic braking is assumed to be regulated dominantly by the rotation rate in the low-latitude region. Therefore, in our model, stars with the equator-fast DR spin down more efficiently than those with the rigid-body rotation. We calculate the evolution of stellar rotation in ranges of stellar mass, $0.9 \, \mathrm{M}{\odot} \le M \le 1.2\, \mathrm{M}{\odot}$, and metallicity, $0.5\, \mathrm{Z}{\odot} \le Z \le 2\, \mathrm{Z}{\odot}$, where $\mathrm{M}{\odot}$ and $\mathrm{Z}{\odot}$ are the solar mass and metallicity, respectively. Our model, using the observed torque in the present solar wind, nicely explains both the current solar rotation and the average trend of the rotation of solar-type stars, including the dependence on metallicity. In addition, our model naturally reproduces the observed trend of the weakened magnetic braking in old slowly rotating solar-type stars because strong equator-fast DR becomes reduced. Our results indicate that LDR and its transition are essential factors that control the stellar spin down.

Read this paper on arXiv…

T. Tokuno, T. Suzuki and M. Shoda
Mon, 28 Nov 22
27/93

Comments: 19 pages, 16 figures, 1 table, submitted to MNRAS