论文标题
快速旋转的年轻M矮人的复杂调制:在难题中添加零件
Complex Modulation of Rapidly Rotating Young M Dwarfs: Adding Pieces to the Puzzle
论文作者
论文摘要
最近,使用开普勒/k2(扇贝壳)和苔丝(复杂的旋转器)发现了新的具有复杂,尖锐和严格周期性光度调制的年轻M矮人。所有这些都是恒星形成关联的一部分,与其他变量恒星不同,并且可能属于统一类。建议的假设包括恒星斑点,灰尘磁盘,材料的共旋转云,磁性约束的材料,斑点和未对准的磁盘以及脉动。在这里,我们提供了全面的概述,并通过Tess和Speculoos Southern观测值(SSO)光度法添加了新的观察性约束。我们从三个新角度审查了所有假设:(1)我们通过年轻的星目录调查了每种情况的发生率; (2)我们使用一年以上的组合数据研究了功能的寿命; (3)我们用多色光度法探测了预期的颜色依赖性。在此过程中,我们还重新审视了有关活动效应的恒星参数,将恒星耀斑作为活动指标在长达一年的时间尺度上作为活动指标,并开发玩具模型以模拟典型的形态。我们排除大多数假设,仅(i)共旋转材料云和(ii)斑点和未对准的磁盘仍然可行 - 请注意。对于(i),共旋转的灰尘可能不够稳定,而仅共旋转气体可能不会引起百分比尺度的特征; (ii)将需要大多数年轻的M矮人周围未对准磁盘。因此,我们提出了一个统一的假设,大振幅点调制的叠加以及共旋转气云的急剧转移。尽管复杂的旋转器的谜团仍然存在,但这些新的观察结果为未来的难题增添了宝贵的作品。
New sets of young M dwarfs with complex, sharp-peaked, and strictly periodic photometric modulations have recently been discovered with Kepler/K2 (scallop shells) and TESS (complex rotators). All are part of star-forming associations, are distinct from other variable stars, and likely belong to a unified class. Suggested hypotheses include star spots, accreting dust disks, co-rotating clouds of material, magnetically constrained material, spots and misaligned disks, and pulsations. Here, we provide a comprehensive overview and add new observational constraints with TESS and SPECULOOS Southern Observatory (SSO) photometry. We scrutinize all hypotheses from three new angles: (1) we investigate each scenario's occurrence rates via young star catalogs; (2) we study the features' longevity using over one year of combined data; and (3) we probe the expected color dependency with multi-color photometry. In this process, we also revisit the stellar parameters accounting for activity effects, study stellar flares as activity indicators over year-long time scales, and develop toy models to simulate typical morphologies. We rule out most hypotheses, and only (i) co-rotating material clouds and (ii) spots and misaligned disks remain feasible - with caveats. For (i), co-rotating dust might not be stable enough, while co-rotating gas alone likely cannot cause percentage-scale features; and (ii) would require misaligned disks around most young M dwarfs. We thus suggest a unified hypothesis, a superposition of large-amplitude spot modulations and sharp transits of co-rotating gas clouds. While the complex rotators' mystery remains, these new observations add valuable pieces to the puzzle going forward.