The Sun in Time: Age, Rotation, and Magnetic Activity of the Sun and Solar-type Stars and Effects on Hosted Planets
Edward F. Guinan, Scott G. Engle

TL;DR
This study investigates how the Sun and solar-type stars' rotation and magnetic activity evolve over time, affecting planetary atmospheres and habitability, by analyzing multi-wavelength data of stars at different ages.
Contribution
It provides new rotation-age-activity relations and XUV spectral irradiance data for solar analogs and extends these findings to lower-mass stars, improving age estimates and habitability assessments.
Findings
Young Sun rotated over 10 times faster than today.
Established reliable rotation-age-activity relations for G, K, M stars.
Quantified XUV irradiance evolution impacting planetary atmospheres.
Abstract
Multi-wavelength studies of solar analogs (G0-5 V stars) with ages from ~50 Myr to 9 Gyr have been carried out as part of the "Sun in Time" program for nearly 20 yrs. From these studies it is inferred that the young (ZAMS) Sun was rotating more than 10x faster than today. As a consequence, young solar-type stars and the early Sun have vigorous magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) dynamos and correspondingly strong coronal X-ray and transition region / chromospheric FUV-UV emissions. To ensure continuity and homogeneity for this program, we use a restricted sample of G0-5 V stars with masses, radii, T(eff), and internal structure (i.e. outer convective zones) closely matching those of the Sun. From these analogs we have determined reliable rotation-age-activity relations and X-ray - UV (XUV) spectral irradiances for the Sun (or any solar-type star) over time. These XUV irradiance measures serve as…
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