On the multiscale behaviour of stellar activity and rotation of the planet host Kepler-30
D. B. de Freitas, A. F. Lanza, F. O. da Silva Gomes, and M. L. Das, Chagas

TL;DR
This study analyzes four years of Kepler photometry of Kepler-30 to investigate stellar activity, rotation, and magnetic field evolution across multiple timescales, revealing cyclic variations and differential rotation in a young solar-like star.
Contribution
It applies multifractal analysis and spot modeling to characterize stellar activity and rotation timescales, including the detection of short-term cyclic variations linked to planetary synodic periods.
Findings
Detected a short-term starspot cycle of ~34 days.
Estimated a lower limit to surface differential rotation of ~0.02.
Identified rotation-related periodicities close to planetary synodic periods.
Abstract
Kepler-30 is a unique target to study stellar activity and rotation in a young solar-like star accompanied by a compact planetary system. We use about 4 years of high-precision photometry collected by the Kepler mission to investigate the fluctuations caused by photospheric convection, stellar rotation, and starspot evolution as a function of the timescale. Our main goal is to apply methods for the analysis of timeseries to find the timescales of the phenomena that affect the light variations. We correlate those timescales with periodicities in the star as well as in the planetary system. We model the flux rotational modulation induced by active regions using spot modelling and apply the MFDMA in standard and multiscale versions for analysing the behaviour of variability and light fluctuations that can be associated with stellar convection and the evolution of magnetic fields on…
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