Abstract

We present rotation periods for thousands of active stars in the Kepler field derived from Q3 data. In most cases a second period close to the rotation period was detected, which we interpreted as surface differential rotation (DR). Active stars were selected from the whole sample using the range of the variability amplitude. To detect different periods in the light curves we used the Lomb-Scargle periodogram in a pre-whitening approach to achieve parameters for a global sine fit. The most dominant periods from the fit were ascribed to different surface rotation periods, but spot evolution could also play a role. Due to the large number of stars the period errors were estimated in a statistical way. We thus cannot exclude the existence of false positives among our periods. In our sample of 40.661 active stars we found 24.124 rotation periods $P_1$ between 0.5-45 days. The distribution of stars with 0.5 < B-V < 1.0 and ages derived from angular momentum evolution that are younger than 300 Myr is consistent with a constant star-formation rate. A second period $P_2$ within $\pm30$% of the rotation period $P_1$ was found in 18.619 stars (77.2%). Attributing these two periods to DR we found that the relative shear $\alpha=\Delta\Omega/\Omega$ increases with rotation period, and slightly decreases with effective temperature. The absolute shear $\Delta\Omega$ slightly increases between $T_{eff}=3500-6000$ K. Above 6000 K $\Delta\Omega$ shows much larger scatter. We found weak dependence of $\Delta\Omega$ on rotation period. Latitudinal differential rotation measured for the first time in more than 18.000 stars provides a comprehensive picture of stellar surface shear, consistent with major predictions from mean-field theory. To what extent our observations are prone to false positives and selection bias is not fully explored, and needs to be addressed using more Kepler data.

Highlights

  • The interplay of stellar rotation and convection is the origin of various stellar activity phenomena

  • The rotation periods of the active Kepler stars are consistent with previous rotation measurements (Fig. 8), supporting the picture of stars losing angular momentum as a result of stellar winds that has been deduced from a long history of observations

  • We applied our method from Paper I to the active fraction of Kepler Quarter 3 (Q3) data to search for differential rotation (DR) in high precision empirical data

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Summary

Introduction

The interplay of stellar rotation and convection is the origin of various stellar activity phenomena. Irwin et al (2011) measure rotation periods for stars with masses below 0.35 M , finding some exceptionally fast and slow rotators. Barnes (2003) shows that this relation holds for open cluster and Mount Wilson stars, and provides a color dependence of the rotation period. These stars do not follow the color-period relation from Barnes (2003), but they can be explained by a radius-dependent braking

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