The Gaia-ESO Survey: A lithium-rotation connection at 5 Myr?
J. Bouvier, A. Lanzafame, L. Venuti, A. Klutsch, R. Jeffries, A., Frasca, E. Moraux, K. Biazzo, S. Messina, G. Micela, S. Randich, J. Stauffer,, A.M. Cody, E. Flaccomio, G. Gilmore, A. Bayo, T. Bensby, A. Bragaglia, C., Carraro, A. Casey, M.T. Costado, F. Damiani

TL;DR
This study finds a relationship between lithium content and rotation in 5-million-year-old stars, indicating early links between stellar rotation, lithium abundance, and possibly planet formation processes.
Contribution
It presents the first evidence of a lithium-rotation connection at 5 Myr, exploring potential models and external factors influencing early stellar evolution.
Findings
Fast rotators are Li-rich compared to slow ones in the 3800-4400K temperature range.
The Li-rotation connection at 5 Myr is similar but weaker than in the 125 Myr-old Pleiades.
Radius inflation is a promising explanation for early Li-rotation correlation.
Abstract
We investigate here the lithium content of young low-mass stars in the 5~Myr-old star forming region NGC~2264 and its relationship with rotation. We combine lithium equivalent width measurements, EW(Li), from the Gaia-ESO Survey with the determination of rotational periods from the CSI~2264 survey. We consider only bona fide non accreting cluster members in order to minimize uncertainties on EW(Li). We report the existence of a relationship between lithium content and rotation in NGC~2264 at an age of 5~Myr. The Li-rotation connection is seen over a restricted temperature range, Teff=3800--4400K, where fast rotators are Li-rich compared to slow ones. This correlation is similar to, albeit of lower amplitude than, the Li-rotation connection previously reported for K dwarfs in the 125 Myr-old Pleiades cluster. We investigate whether the non-standard pre-main sequence models developed so…
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