Rotation period distribution of CoRoT and Kepler Sun-like stars
I. C. Le\~ao, L. Pasquini, C. E. Ferreira Lopes, V. Neves, A. A. R., Valcarce, L. L. A. de Oliveira, D. Freire da Silva, D. B. de Freitas, B. L., Canto Martins, E. Janot-Pacheco, A. Baglin, and J. R. De Medeiros

TL;DR
This study analyzes the rotation period distribution of Sun-like stars from CoRoT and Kepler data, revealing two main populations and confirming the Sun's typical rotation within observational uncertainties.
Contribution
It introduces synthetic bias simulations to interpret observed rotation period distributions and distinguishes young and evolved star populations.
Findings
Two main stellar populations identified: young (<1 Gyr) and older (>1 Gyr).
Synthetic models successfully reproduce observed rotation period distributions.
The Sun's rotation period is consistent with typical Sun-like stars.
Abstract
We study the distribution of the photometric rotation period (Prot), which is a direct measurement of the surface rotation at active latitudes, for three subsamples of Sun-like stars: one from CoRoT data and two from Kepler data. We identify the main populations of these samples and interpret their main biases specifically for a comparison with the solar Prot. Prot and variability amplitude (A) measurements were obtained from public CoRoT and Kepler catalogs combined with physical parameters. Because these samples are subject to selection effects, we computed synthetic samples with simulated biases to compare with observations, particularly around the location of the Sun in the HR diagram. Theoretical grids and empirical relations were used to combine physical parameters with Prot and A. Biases were simulated by performing cutoffs on the physical and rotational parameters in the same…
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