Hunting for anti-solar differentially rotating stars using the Rossby number -- An application to the Kepler field
Quentin Noraz, Sylvain N. Breton, Allan Sacha Brun, Rafael A., Garc\'ia, Antoine Strugarek, Angela R. G. Santos, Savita Mathur, Louis Amard

TL;DR
This study identifies potential main-sequence solar-type stars with anti-solar differential rotation in the Kepler data by developing a new method to estimate Rossby numbers from observations, aiding understanding of stellar magnetic evolution.
Contribution
Introduces a new theoretical formula to estimate fluid Rossby numbers from observational data, accounting for internal structure and metallicity, to identify anti-solar rotators among Kepler stars.
Findings
Identified 22 promising candidate stars for anti-solar differential rotation.
Most promising candidates are early-G or late-F stars at log g ≈ 4.37 dex.
Future studies on these stars will enhance understanding of stellar magnetic and rotational evolution.
Abstract
Anti-solar differential rotation profiles have been found for decades in numerical simulations of convective envelopes of solar-type stars. These profiles are characterized by a slow equator and fast poles (i.e., reversed with respect to the Sun) and have been found in simulations for high Rossby numbers (slow rotators). Rotation profiles like this have been reported observationally in evolved stars, but have never been unambiguously observed for cool solar-type stars on the main sequence. In this context, detecting this regime in main-sequence solar-type stars would improve our understanding of their magnetorotational evolution. The goal of this study is to identify the most promising cool main-sequence stellar candidates for anti-solar differential rotation in the \textit{Kepler} sample. First, we introduce a new theoretical formula to estimate fluid Rossby numbers, , of…
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