Spot evolution on the red giant star XX Triangulum. A starspot-decay analysis based on time-series Doppler imaging
A. K\"unstler, T. A. Carroll, and K. G. Strassmeier

TL;DR
This study analyzes starspot evolution on the rapidly rotating K0 giant XX Tri using six years of Doppler imaging, revealing a linear decay law, weak differential rotation, and a predicted magnetic cycle of approximately 26 years.
Contribution
First detailed starspot decay analysis on XX Tri over six years, linking decay rate to magnetic diffusivity and activity cycle prediction.
Findings
Average linear decay rate of starspots: -0.022 SH/day
Detected weak solar-like differential rotation with shear α=0.016
Predicted magnetic activity cycle of approximately 26 years
Abstract
Solar spots appear to decay linearly proportional to their size. The decay rate of solar spots is directly related to magnetic diffusivity, which itself is a key quantity for the length of a magnetic-activity cycle. Is a linear spot decay also seen on other stars, and is this in agreement with the large range of solar and stellar activity cycle lengths? We investigate the evolution of starspots on the rapidly-rotating ( 24 d) K0 giant XX Tri, using consecutive time-series Doppler images. Our aim is to obtain a well-sampled movie of the stellar surface over many years, and thereby detect and quantify a starspot decay law for further comparison with the Sun. We obtained continuous high-resolution and phase-resolved spectroscopy with the 1.2-m robotic STELLA telescope on Tenerife over six years. For each observing season, we obtained between 5 to 7 independent…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Solar and Space Plasma Dynamics · Astro and Planetary Science
