The role of tidal interactions in the formation of slowly rotating early-type stars in young star clusters
Chenyu He, Chengyuan Li, Weijia Sun, Richard de Grijs, Lu Li, Jing, Zhong, Songmei Qin, Li Chen, Li Wang, Baitian Tang, Zhengyi Shao, and Cheng, Xu

TL;DR
This study investigates whether tidal interactions in binary stars cause the slow rotation of certain stars in young clusters, finding that tides are unlikely the main factor based on radial velocity measurements.
Contribution
The paper provides observational evidence that tidal interactions are not the primary cause of slow rotation in split main sequence stars, challenging previous hypotheses.
Findings
Most slowly rotating stars are not radial-velocity variables.
Predicted radial velocity variations from tidal theory exceed observed values.
Tidal interactions are unlikely the dominant mechanism for slow rotation.
Abstract
The split main sequences found in the colour-magnitude diagrams of star clusters younger than ~600 Myr are suggested to be caused by the dichotomy of stellar rotation rates of upper main-sequence stars. Tidal interactions have been suggested as a possible explanation of the dichotomy of the stellar rotation rates. This hypothesis proposes that the slow rotation rates of stars along the split main sequences are caused by tidal interactions in binaries. To test this scenario, we measured the variations in the radial velocities of slowly rotating stars along the split main sequence of the young Galactic cluster NGC 2422 (~90 Myr) using spectra obtained at multiple epochs with the Canada-France-Hawai'i Telescope. Our results show that most slowly rotating stars are not radial-velocity variables. Using the theory of dynamical tides, we find that the binary separations necessary to fully or…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
