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Rotational Variables: Kepler Versus ASAS-SN

Rotational Variables: Kepler Versus ASAS-SN

来源:Arxiv_logoArxiv
英文摘要

Rotational variables are stars that vary in brightness due to star spots modulated by rotation. They are probes of stellar magnetism, binarity, and evolution. Phillips et al. (2023) explored distinct populations of ~50,000 high-amplitude rotational variables from the All-Sky Automated Survey for Supernovae (ASAS-SN), examining correlations between stellar rotation, binarity, and activity. Here, we carry out a similar analysis of ~50,000 much lower amplitude Kepler rotational variables. The Kepler population is dominated by slowly rotating, single, main sequence stars, with a striking absence of the rapidly rotating main sequence group in the ASAS-SN sample. The binary fractions of the Kepler rotators are significantly lower than for the ASAS-SN systems and they are significantly less spotted, as expected from their lower amplitudes. The scope of these statistical surveys will dramatically increase in the near future.

Jack Stethem、Christopher S. Kochanek、Anya Phillips、Lyra Cao、Marc Pinsonneault

Department of Astronomy, The Ohio State UniversityDepartment of Astronomy, The Ohio State UniversityCenter for Astrophysics - Harvard and SmithsonianDepartment of Physics and Astronomy, Vanderbilt UniversityDepartment of Astronomy, The Ohio State University

天文学

Jack Stethem,Christopher S. Kochanek,Anya Phillips,Lyra Cao,Marc Pinsonneault.Rotational Variables: Kepler Versus ASAS-SN[EB/OL].(2025-06-16)[2025-07-20].https://arxiv.org/abs/2506.13919.点此复制

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