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Improved angular momentum evolution model for solar-like stars

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TLDR
In this paper, the rotational evolution of solar-like stars between 1 Myr and 10 Gyr with the aim of reproducing the distributions of rotational periods observed for star forming regions and young open clusters within this age range was studied.
Abstract
Context. Understanding the origin and evolution of stellar angular momentum is one of the major challenges of stellar physics.Aims. We present new models for the rotational evolution of solar-like stars between 1 Myr and 10 Gyr with the aim of reproducing the distributions of rotational periods observed for star forming regions and young open clusters within this age range.Methods. The models include a new wind braking law based on recent numerical simulations of magnetized stellar winds and specific dynamo and mass-loss prescriptions are adopted to tie angular momentum loss to angular velocity. The models additionally assume constant angular velocity during the disk accretion phase and allow for decoupling between the radiative core and the convective envelope as soon as the former develops.Results. We have developed rotational evolution models for slow, median, and fast rotators with initial periods of 10, 7, and 1.4 d, respectively. The models reproduce reasonably well the rotational behavior of solar-type stars between 1 Myr and 4.5 Gyr, including pre-main sequence (PMS) to zero-age main sequence (ZAMS) spin up, prompt ZAMS spin down, and the early-main sequence (MS) convergence of surface rotation rates. We find the model parameters accounting for the slow and median rotators are very similar to each other, with a disk lifetime of 5 Myr and a core-envelope coupling timescale of 28−30 Myr. In contrast, fast rotators have both shorter disk lifetimes (2.5 Myr) and core-envelope coupling timescales (12 Myr). We show that a large amount of angular momentum is hidden in the radiative core for as long as 1 Gyr in these models and we discuss the implications for internal differential rotation and lithium depletion. We emphasize that these results are highly dependent on the adopted braking law. We also report a tentative correlation between the initial rotational period and disk lifetime, which suggests that protostellar spin down by massive disks in the embedded phase is at the origin of the initial dispersion of rotation rates in young stars.Conclusions. We conclude that this class of semi-empirical models successfully grasp the main trends of the rotational behavior of solar-type stars as they evolve and make specific predictions that may serve as a guide for further development.

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Mesa isochrones and stellar tracks (mist). i. solar-scaled models

TL;DR: The Modules for Experiments in Stellar Astrophysics (MESA) Isochrones and Stellar Tracks (MIST) project as discussed by the authors provides a set of stellar evolutionary tracks and isochrones computed using MESA, a state-of-the-art 1D stellar evolution package.
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MESA Isochrones and Stellar Tracks (MIST). I: Solar-Scaled Models

TL;DR: The Modules for Experiments in Stellar Astrophysics (MESA) Isochrones and Stellar Tracks (MIST) project as mentioned in this paper provides a set of stellar evolutionary tracks and isochrones computed using MESA, a state-of-the-art 1D stellar evolution package.
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Rotation periods of 34,030 kepler main-sequence stars: the full autocorrelation sample

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Rotation Periods of 34,030 Kepler Main-Sequence Stars: The Full Autocorrelation Sample

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors analyzed 3 years of data from the Kepler space mission to derive rotation periods of main-sequence stars below 6500 K. Their automated autocorrelation-based method detected rotation periods between 0.2 and 70 days for 34,030 (25.6%) of the 133,030 Kepler targets (excluding known eclipsing binaries and Kepler Objects of Interest).
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