When Do Stalled Stars Resume Spinning Down? Advancing Gyrochronology with Ruprecht 147
Jason Lee Curtis, Marcel A. Ag\"ueros, Sean P. Matt, Kevin R. Covey,, Stephanie T. Douglas, Ruth Angus, Steven H. Saar, Ann Marie Cody, Andrew, Vanderburg, Nicholas M. Law, Adam L. Kraus, David W. Latham, Christoph, Baranec, Reed Riddle, Carl Ziegler, Mikkel N. Lund

TL;DR
This study investigates when stars resume spinning down after a period of stalled rotation, using data from open clusters to refine gyrochronology models and improve stellar age estimates.
Contribution
It provides new measurements of rotation periods for stars around 2.7 Gyr old, extending the sample and analyzing the stalled spin-down phase to improve stellar age determination methods.
Findings
Stars remain stalled in spin-down for at least 1.3 Gyr at 0.55 M$_\odot$
The slowly rotating sequence is relatively flat at about 22 days
The intersection with the intermediate period gap shows it is not due to star formation lull
Abstract
Recent measurements of rotation periods () in the benchmark open clusters Praesepe (670 Myr), NGC 6811 (1 Gyr), and NGC 752 (1.4 Gyr) demonstrate that, after converging onto a tight sequence of slowly rotating stars in massperiod space, stars temporarily stop spinning down. These data also show that the duration of this epoch of stalled spin-down increases toward lower masses. To determine when stalled stars resume spinning down, we use data from the mission and the Palomar Transient Factory to measure for 58 dwarf members of the 2.7-Gyr-old cluster Ruprecht 147, 39 of which satisfy our criteria designed to remove short-period or near-equal-mass binaries. Combined with the data for the approximately coeval cluster NGC 6819 (30 stars with M), our new measurements more than double the number of…
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