Time evolution and rotation of starspots on CoRoT-2 from the modelling of transit photometry
Adriana Silva-Valio, A. F. Lanza

TL;DR
This study models starspots on CoRoT-2 using transit photometry to analyze their evolution, distribution, and stellar rotation, revealing differential rotation and spot-free regions similar to solar coronal holes.
Contribution
The paper introduces a detailed spot modeling approach using transit data to map starspots and measure stellar rotation and differential rotation.
Findings
Detected a starspot-free region near the equator
Measured stellar rotation period as 4.48 days
Identified differential rotation of about 3%
Abstract
CoRoT-2, the second planet-hosting star discovered by the CoRoT satellite, is a young and active star. A total of 77 transits were observed for this system over a period of 135 days. Small modulations detected in the optical light curve of the planetary transits are used to study the position, size, intensity, and temporal evolution of the photospheric spots on the surface of the star that are occulted by the planetary disk. We apply a spot model to these variations and create a spot map of the stellar surface of CoRoT-2 within the transit band for every transit. From these maps, we estimate the stellar rotation period and obtain the longitudes of the spots in a reference frame rotating with the star. Moreover, the spots temporal evolution is determined. This model achieves a spatial resolution of 2\circ. Mapping of 392 spots vs. longitude indicates the presence of a region free of…
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