English

A Relationship Between Stellar Age and Spot Coverage

Solar and Stellar Astrophysics 2020-04-29 v1 Earth and Planetary Astrophysics

Abstract

We investigate starspot distributions consistent with space-based photometry of F, G, and K stars in six stellar associations ranging in age from 10 Myr to 4 Gyr. We show that a simple light curve statistic called the "smoothed amplitude" is proportional to stellar age as t1/2t^{-1/2}, following a Skumanich-like spin-down relation. We marginalize over the unknown stellar inclinations by forward modeling the ensemble of light curves for direct comparison with the Kepler, K2 and TESS photometry. We sample the posterior distributions for spot coverage with Approximate Bayesian Computation. We find typical spot coverages in the range 1-10% which decrease with increasing stellar age. The spot coverage is proportional to tnt^n where n=0.37±0.16n =-0.37 \pm 0.16, also statistically consistent with a Skumanich-like t1/2t^{-1/2} decay of starspot coverage with age. We apply two techniques to estimate the spot coverage of young exoplanet-hosting stars likely to be targeted for transmission spectroscopy with the James Webb Space Telescope, and estimate the bias in exoplanet radius measurements due to varying starspot coverage.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2002.09135,
  title  = {A Relationship Between Stellar Age and Spot Coverage},
  author = {Brett M. Morris},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2002.09135},
  year   = {2020}
}

Comments

21 pages, 11 figures, accepted in ApJ, software in review at JOSS https://github.com/openjournals/joss-reviews/issues/2103

R2 v1 2026-06-23T13:49:01.682Z