M-Dwarf Fast Rotators and the Detection of Relatively Young Multiple M-Star Systems
S. Rappaport, J. Swift, A. Levine, M. Joss, R. Sanchis-Ojeda, T., Barclay, M. Still, G. Handler, K. Ol\'ah, P. S. Muirhead, D. Huber, and K., Vida

TL;DR
This study analyzes Kepler data to identify rapidly rotating M-dwarfs, revealing that many are part of young, hierarchical multiple star systems, which aids understanding of stellar evolution and system formation.
Contribution
It introduces a method to detect young multiple M-star systems through rapid rotation periods in Kepler light curves, highlighting their prevalence and potential for studying stellar evolution.
Findings
178 M-star targets with P_rot < 2 days identified
Multiple short periods suggest hierarchical multiple systems
Rapid rotation occurrence rate aligns with spin evolution models
Abstract
We have searched the Kepler light curves of ~3900 M-star targets for evidence of periodicities that indicate, by means of the effects of starspots, rapid stellar rotation. Several analysis techniques, including Fourier transforms, inspection of folded light curves, 'sonograms', and phase tracking of individual modulation cycles, were applied in order to distinguish the periodicities due to rapid rotation from those due to stellar pulsations, eclipsing binaries, or transiting planets. We find 178 Kepler M-star targets with rotation periods, P_rot, of < 2 days, and 110 with P_rot < 1 day. Some 30 of the 178 systems exhibit two or more independent short periods within the same Kepler photometric aperture, while several have three or more short periods. Adaptive optics imaging and modeling of the Kepler pixel response function for a subset of our sample support the conclusion that the…
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