Searching for stellar cycles on low mass stars using TESS data
Gavin Ramsay (Armagh Observatory, Planetarium), Pasi Hakala, (FINCA), J. Gerry Doyle (Armagh)

TL;DR
This study investigates stellar activity cycles in low mass M dwarfs using TESS data, identifying stable rotation signals and potential activity cycle variations over several years.
Contribution
It provides the first large-scale analysis of stellar activity cycles in low mass stars using TESS data, revealing amplitude variability and potential cycle durations.
Findings
245 stars show stable rotation signatures
26 low mass stars exhibit amplitude variability
A marginal correlation between amplitude range and rotation period
Abstract
We have searched for stellar activity cycles in late low mass M dwarfs (M0--M6) located in the TESS north and south continuous viewing zones using data from sectors 1--61 (Cycle 1 to part way through Cycle 5). We utilise TESS-SPOC data which initially had a cadence of 30 min but reducing to 10 min in Cycles 3. In addition, we require each star to be observed in at least 6 sectors in each North/South Cycle: 1,950 low mass stars meet these criteria. Strong evidence was seen in 245 stars for a very stable photometric variation which we assume to be a signature of the stars rotation period. We did a similar study for Solar-like stars and found that 194 out of 1432 stars had a very stable modulation. We then searched for evidence of a variation in the rotational amplitude. We found 26 low mass stars showed evidence of variability in their photometric amplitude and only one Solar-like star.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomical Observations and Instrumentation
