Surface magnetism of rapidly rotating red giants: single versus close binary stars
Charlotte Gehan, Patrick Gaulme, Jie Yu

TL;DR
This study reveals that close binary red giants with tidal locking exhibit significantly stronger magnetic activity than single red giants with similar rotation periods, indicating tidal effects enhance stellar magnetism.
Contribution
It provides observational evidence that tidal locking in close binary red giants leads to increased magnetic activity, advancing understanding of stellar magnetism in evolved binary systems.
Findings
Close binary red giants show larger chromospheric emission than single stars.
Tidal locking correlates with stronger magnetic activity at similar rotation periods.
Results can help distinguish single and binary red giants in automated analyses.
Abstract
According to dynamo theory, stars with convective envelopes efficiently generate surface magnetic fields, which manifest as magnetic activity in the form of starspots, faculae, flares, when their rotation period is shorter than their convective turnover time. Most red giants, having undergone significant spin down while expanding, have slow rotation and no spots. However, based on a sample of about 4500 red giants observed by the NASA Kepler mission, a previous study showed that about 8 % display spots, including about 15 % that belong to close binary systems. Here, we shed light on a puzzling fact: for rotation periods less than 80 days, a red giant that belongs to a close binary system displays a photometric modulation about an order of magnitude larger than that of a single red giant with similar rotational period and physical properties. We investigate whether binarity leads to…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies
