Revisiting the cycle-rotation connection for late-type stars
M. Mittag, J.H.M.M. Schmitt, K.-P. Schr\"oder

TL;DR
This study analyzes the relationship between activity cycle length, Rossby number, and stellar properties in main sequence stars, revealing a bifurcation into two cycle branches linked to stellar temperature and convection zone depth.
Contribution
It provides new empirical relations between cycle period and Rossby number, clarifies the bifurcation into short and long cycle branches, and links these to stellar internal layers and temperature.
Findings
Linear relation between Rossby number and cycle period in double-logarithmic space.
Clear bifurcation into short and long cycle branches dependent on B-V color index.
Empirical relations match solar cycle periods, supporting a unified dynamo mechanism.
Abstract
We analyse the relation between the activity cycle length and the Rossby number and collected a sample of 44 main sequence stars with well-known activity cycle periods and rotation periods. We find a linear behaviour in the double-logarithmic relation between the Rossby number and cycle period. The bifurcation into a long and a short period branch is clearly real but it depends, empirically, on the colour index B-V, indicating a physical dependence on effective temperature and position on the main sequence. Furthermore, there is also a correlation between cycle length and convective turnover time with the relative depth of the convection zone. Based on this, we derive empirical relations between cycle period and Rossby number, and for the short period cycle branch relations, we estimate a scatter of the relative deviation between 14% and 28% on the long-period cycle branch. With these…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Solar and Space Plasma Dynamics · Astro and Planetary Science
