Weakened magnetic braking as the origin of anomalously rapid rotation in old field stars
Jennifer L. van Saders, Tugdual Ceillier, Travis S. Metcalfe, Victor, Silva Aguirre, Marc H. Pinsonneault, Rafael A. Garc\'ia, Savita Mathur, Guy, R. Davies

TL;DR
This paper investigates why old stars rotate faster than expected by proposing that magnetic braking weakens with age, challenging existing models and impacting the use of gyrochronology for age estimation.
Contribution
The study introduces stellar models with weakened magnetic braking for old stars, successfully explaining observed rapid rotation in old field stars and cluster data.
Findings
Models with weakened magnetic braking match observational data
Old stars exhibit unexpectedly rapid rotation
Gyrochronology's accuracy diminishes for stars beyond halfway through their main sequence
Abstract
A knowledge of stellar ages is crucial for our understanding of many astrophysical phenomena, and yet ages can be difficult to determine. As they become older, stars lose mass and angular momentum, resulting in an observed slowdown in surface rotation. The technique of 'gyrochronology' uses the rotation period of a star to calculate its age. However, stars of known age must be used for calibration, and, until recently, the approach was untested for old stars (older than 1 gigayear, Gyr). Rotation periods are now known for stars in an open cluster of intermediate age (NGC 6819; 2.5 Gyr old), and for old field stars whose ages have been determined with asteroseismology. The data for the cluster agree with previous period-age relations, but these relations fail to describe the asteroseismic sample. Here we report stellar evolutionary modelling, and confirm the presence of unexpectedly…
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