The open flux evolution of a solar-mass star on the main sequence
V. See, M. Jardine, A. A. Vidotto, J.-F. Donati, S. Boro Saikia, R., Fares, C. P. Folsom, S. V. Jeffers, S. C. Marsden, J. Morin, P. Petit, the, BCool Collaboration

TL;DR
This study models the magnetic flux loss in solar-mass stars on the main sequence using open flux and magnetograms, revealing the dipolar field's dominant role in stellar spin-down.
Contribution
It introduces a new torque law based on open flux and compares methods of calculating open flux, enhancing understanding of stellar magnetic braking.
Findings
Open flux correlates with stellar rotation.
Dipolar magnetic component dominates spin-down.
Small difference between open flux calculation methods.
Abstract
Magnetic activity is known to be correlated to the rotation period for moderately active main sequence solar-like stars. In turn, the stellar rotation period evolves as a result of magnetised stellar winds that carry away angular momentum. Understanding the interplay between magnetic activity and stellar rotation is therefore a central task for stellar astrophysics. Angular momentum evolution models typically employ spin-down torques that are formulated in terms of the surface magnetic field strength. However, these formulations fail to account for the magnetic field geometry, unlike those that are expressed in terms of the open flux, i.e. the magnetic flux along which stellar winds flow. In this work, we model the angular momentum evolution of main sequence solar-mass stars using a torque law formulated in terms of the open flux. This is done using a potential field source surface…
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