Long-term stellar activity of M dwarfs: A combined K2 and TESS study of two early M-type stars
St. Raetz, B. Stelzer

TL;DR
This study combines K2 and TESS data to analyze long-term stellar activity and rotation in early M-type stars, revealing stable rotation periods, variable spot activity, and potential activity cycles over several years.
Contribution
It demonstrates the effectiveness of combining K2 and TESS data for long-term monitoring of M dwarf activity and rotation, including detection of differential rotation and activity cycles.
Findings
Rotation periods remained stable over 4.5 years.
Spot activity amplitude varied between epochs.
Differential rotation was detected in one star.
Abstract
Studies of the rotation and activity of M type stars are essential to enhance our understanding of stellar dynamos and angular momentum evolution. Using the outstanding photometric capabilities of space telescopes rotation signals even with low amplitudes can be investigated in up to now unrivaled detail. By combining data of K2 and the TESS prime mission the star spot activity of M dwarfs can be monitored on half a decade timescale. In the framework of our study on the rotation-activity relation for bright and nearby M dwarfs we also aim at an investigation of the long-term activity. While K2 was observing fields distributed around the ecliptic plane, the TESS prime mission was oriented along a line of ecliptic longitude with one camera centered on an ecliptic pole. Due to these different observing strategies, the overlap between K2 and the TESS prime mission is marginal. However, 45…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astronomical Observations and Instrumentation
