The rotation-magnetism relationship in solar-type stars. Constraining magnetic flux emergence rates
Emre Isik, Sami K. Solanki, Natalie A. Krivova, Alexander I. Shapiro

TL;DR
This study uses numerical simulations and empirical data to constrain how magnetic flux emergence rates in solar-type stars depend on rotation, revealing a steep scaling and the influence of metallicity and temperature.
Contribution
It introduces a model linking magnetic flux emergence rates to stellar rotation and provides correction factors for metallicity and temperature effects.
Findings
Magnetic flux emergence rates scale steeply with rotation (power-law exponent ~1.9).
Metallicity and temperature significantly affect the rotation-magnetism relationship.
Active-region fields dominate surface flux on rapid rotators, small-scale fields on slow rotators.
Abstract
The rotation-activity relationship of G-type stars results from surface magnetic fields emerging from the interior. How the magnetic flux and its emergence rate scale with rotation rate are not well understood, both observationally and theoretically. We aim at constraining the emerging magnetic flux as a function of the rotation rate in solar-type stars by numerical simulations compared to empirical constraints set by direct measurements of stellar magnetic fields. We use our Flux Emergence And Transport (FEAT) model for stars with a range of power-law slopes for the dependence of emerging flux on rotation. Complementing this with a heuristic account of the main flux components, we model the resulting mean unsigned field strength as a function of the rotation rate. We compare the results with the Zeeman-intensification measurements and spectropolarimetric data of solar-type stars.…
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