Activity and Rotation of Nearby Field M Dwarfs in the TESS Southern Continuous Viewing Zone
Francys Anthony, Alejandro N\'u\~nez, Marcel A. Ag\"ueros, Jason L., Curtis, J.-D. do Nascimento, Jr., Jo\~ao M. Machado, Andrew W. Mann,, Elisabeth R. Newton, Rayna Rampalli, Pa Chia Thao, Mackenna L. Wood

TL;DR
This study investigates magnetic activity and rotation in nearby M dwarfs using TESS data and spectroscopy, revealing activity longevity, rotation periods, and hints about magnetic saturation.
Contribution
It provides new spectroscopic measurements of chromospheric activity and rotation periods for a sample of nearby M dwarfs in the TESS Southern CVZ, expanding understanding of their magnetic evolution.
Findings
Active fraction aligns with expectations for field M dwarfs.
Rotation periods up to ~15 days confirmed for 12 stars.
Some fast rotators show low activity, suggesting magnetic saturation effects.
Abstract
The evolution of magnetism in late-type dwarfs remains murky, as we can only weakly predict levels of activity for M dwarfs of a given mass and age. We report results from our spectroscopic survey of M dwarfs in the Southern Continuous Viewing Zone (CVZ) of the Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS). As the TESS CVZs overlap with those of the James Webb Space Telescope, our targets constitute a legacy sample for studies of nearby M dwarfs. For 122 stars, we obtained at least one optical spectrum with which we measure chromospheric emission, a proxy for magnetic field strength. The fraction of active stars is consistent with what is expected for field M dwarfs; as in previous studies, we find that late-type M dwarfs remain active for longer than their early type counterparts. While the TESS light curves for 20% of our targets show…
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