Solar-Type Stars: Basic Information on Their Characterization and Classification
David R. Soderblom & Jeremy R. King (Space Telescope Science Institute)


6. Duplicity and Angular Momentum

6.1 Companionship

Companionship is a key property of stars, and especially so for solar-type stars because of their convective envelopes. This is because a nearby star can exert enough tidal force to make the star rotate synchronously with the orbital motion. Companionship is also a key issue for star formation. Mayor and Latham are surveying large numbers of solar-type stars with radial-velocity observations. Their accuracy is now 100 m s-1> or better.

Close Companions: We know that for close binaries (Porb less than 10 days), the companion can induce synchronous rotation, leading to much higher surface rotation than would be seen in a single star of the same age. Such stars may evolve much more rapidly than single stars because of higher, constant angular momentum loss and spiraling-in. Systems of sufficiently short period (less than about 10 days) are suspected of suppressing Li depletion in the main sequence phase. This suggests suppression of radially-differential rotation, which could have much more significant effects.

Distant Companions: How about more distant companions? They can disrupt planetary systems, of course, but they probably do not affect the structure or evolution of the primary star.

Very-Low-Mass Companions: A notable case is 51 Pegasi:

6.2. The Role of Rotation

Angular momentum is a fundamental property of a star, of course, and it is at the heart of the rich phenomenology seen in solar-type stars. Clearly rotation, and differences in rotation, lead to observable micro-properties, notably the many forms of activity we can now see in other stars. But does rotation lead to differences in the macro-properties of a star? Some basics:

FIGURE 14: Rotation rates (v sin i, in km s-1 versus dereddened B-V color, for stars in the Pleiades, from SSHJ. The triangles represent upper limits to v sin i. The line shows the run of rotation with color for stars of the Hyades.}

FIGURE 15:Model of the evolution of rotation in a 1 M\odot star (see Charbonneau 1992). The separate curves show how the surface and core spin at different rates, with convergence achieved by the age of the Sun. The Skumanich t-1/2 relation is shown for reference.}


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