STELLAR MAGNETIC CYCLES in the SOLAR-LIKE STARS KEPLER-17 and KEPLER-63

Tipo
Artigo
Data de publicação
2016
Periódico
Astrophysical Journal
Citações (Scopus)
20
Autores
Estrela R.
Valio A.
Orientador
Título da Revista
ISSN da Revista
Título de Volume
Membros da banca
Programa
Resumo
© 2016. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved..The stellar magnetic field plays a crucial role in the star internal mechanisms, as in the interactions with its environment. The study of starspots provides information about the stellar magnetic field and can characterize the cycle. Moreover, the analysis of solar-type stars is also useful to shed light onto the origin of the solar magnetic field. The objective of this work is to characterize the magnetic activity of stars. Here, we studied two solar-type stars, Kepler-17 and Kepler-63, using two methods to estimate the magnetic cycle length. The first one characterizes the spots (radius, intensity, and location) by fitting the small variations in the light curve of a star caused by the occultation of a spot during a planetary transit. This approach yields the number of spots present in the stellar surface and the flux deficit subtracted from the star by their presence during each transit. The second method estimates the activity from the excess in the residuals of the transit light curves. This excess is obtained by subtracting a spotless model transit from the light curve and then integrating all the residuals during the transit. The presence of long-term periodicity is estimated in both time series. With the first method, we obtained P cycle = 1.12 ±0.16 year (Kepler-17) and P cycle = 1.27 ±0.16 year (Kepler-63), and for the second approach the values are 1.35 ±0.27 year and 1.27 ±0.12 year, respectively. The results of both methods agree with each other and confirm their robustness.
Descrição
Palavras-chave
Assuntos Scopus
Citação
DOI (Texto completo)