High Dispersion Spectroscopy of Solar-type Superflare Stars. II. Stellar Rotation, Starspots, and Chromospheric Activities
Yuta Notsu, Satoshi Honda, Hiroyuki Maehara, Shota Notsu, Takuya, Shibayama, Daisaku Nogami, Kazunari Shibata

TL;DR
This study used high dispersion spectroscopy to analyze 50 superflare stars, confirming that their brightness variations are caused by large starspots and high magnetic activity, with many stars showing no binarity.
Contribution
It provides spectroscopic evidence linking large starspots and high chromospheric activity to superflare stars, supporting the rotation-starspot hypothesis.
Findings
Projected rotational velocities match brightness variation periods.
Superflare stars exhibit higher magnetic fields than the Sun.
Brightness variation correlates with chromospheric activity levels.
Abstract
We conducted high dispersion spectroscopic observations of 50 superflare stars with Subaru/HDS. These 50 stars were selected from the solar-type superflare stars that we had discovered from the Kepler data. More than half (34 stars) of these 50 target superflare stars show no evidence of binarity, and we estimated stellar parameters of these 34 stars in our previous study (Notsu et al. 2015, hereafter called Paper I). According to our previous studies using Kepler data, superflare stars show quasi-periodic brightness variations whose amplitude (0.1-10\%) is much larger than that of the solar brightness variations (0.01-0.1\%) caused by the existence of sunspots on the rotating solar surface. In this study, we investigated whether these quasi-periodic brightness variations of superflare stars are explained by the rotation of a star with fairly large starspots, by using stellar parameters…
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