X-Ray, FUV, and UV Observations of alpha Centauri B: Determination of Long-term Magnetic Activity Cycle and Rotation Period
L.E. DeWarf, K.M. Datin, and E.F. Guinan

TL;DR
This study presents multi-wavelength observations of alpha Centauri B, revealing its magnetic activity cycle and rotation period, which are crucial for understanding stellar evolution and planetary habitability around K-type stars.
Contribution
It provides the first reliable measurements of the long-term magnetic activity cycle and rotation period of alpha Centauri B, a key calibrator for K-star stellar activity relations.
Findings
Alpha Cen B has an 8.84-year activity cycle.
The star's rotation period is 36.2 days.
Long-term variability in X-ray to NUV fluxes observed.
Abstract
We have been carrying out a study of stellar magnetic activity, dynamos, atmospheric physics, and spectral irradiances from a sample of solar-type G0-5 V stars with different ages. One of the major goals of this program is to study the evolution of the Sun's X-ray through NUV spectral irradiances with age. Of particular interest is the determination of the young Sun's elevated levels of high-energy fluxes because of the critical roles that X-ray through FUV emissions play on the photochemical and photoionization evolution of early, young planetary atmospheres and ionospheres. Motivated by the current exoplanetary search missions that are hunting for earth-size planets in the habitable zones of nearby main-sequence G-M stars, we are expanding our program to cooler, less luminous, but much more numerous main-sequence K-type stars, such as alpha Centauri B. The long life (2-3x longer than…
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