Many people start to slow down as they age, and stars seem to be the same way. Astronomers measure how fast stars spin to determine their ages, but new measurements suggest that some stars may wind down more quickly than others.

Assigning Ages

It’s relatively straightforward to determine the age of a star that belongs to a cluster. The age of the cluster — and the stars that comprise it — is equal to the hydrogen-burning lifetime of the stars that are just about to swerve off the main sequence and balloon into red giants.

It’s much more challenging to measure the age of an isolated star. Astronomers rely on a method called gyrochronology — measuring a star’s age from the seemingly predictable slowdown of its rotation over time.

Stellar rotation periods appear to increase with the square root of the star’s age, but recent observations have hinted that that may not be true for all stars.

Evidence from Star Clusters

A team led by Jason Lee Curtis (Columbia University) studied F, G, and K stars to determine if the slowdown rate depends on mass. They used light curves from the Kepler spacecraft to measure the rotation periods of stars in NGC 6811, an open cluster in the constellation Cygnus. Curtis and collaborators used the observed rotation periods of the F and G stars in NGC 6811 to pinpoint the cluster’s age at 1.04 billion years.

Next, they turned to a younger open cluster, Praesepe, which clocks in at around 670 million years old. Using a gyrochronology model derived from Praesepe’s observed stellar rotation periods, the authors artificially aged the cluster to 1 billion years old — the same age as NGC 6811. If all stars spin down the same way, the rotation rates of the artificially aged cluster should match those from NGC 6811.

Instead, although the rotation rates of the F and G stars from the two clusters matched neatly, NGC 6811’s lower-mass K stars were spinning faster than expected. In fact, they lined up almost perfectly with the K stars in the much younger cluster. In other words, while the F and G stars had slowed down with age, the K stars seemed to have not slowed down a bit in at least 330 million years.

Why the Slow Pace?

One interpretation of this finding is that a star’s spin-down rate depends on its mass, with lower-mass stars winding down more slowly. However, the authors cautioned that it may not be that simple. Instead, they posited that stars experience a period during which their rotation rates don’t slow down — and lower-mass stars spend more time in this stalled spin-down state than higher-mass stars.

The authors aren’t sure what causes the stars to take a break from spinning down. They suggested that the stars either temporarily experience less magnetic braking or their outer layers gain angular momentum from their interiors.

Curtis and collaborators hope that studies of even older clusters, like 2.5-billion-year-old Ruprecht 147, will reveal at what point K dwarfs resume their usual spin-down and lead to a better understanding of how rotation rates can be used to determine the ages of stars.

Citation

“A Temporary Epoch of Stalled Spin-down for Low-mass Stars: Insights from NGC 6811 with Gaia and Kepler,” J. L. Curtis, M. A. Agüeros, S. T. Douglas, and S. Meibom 2019 ApJ 879 49. doi:10.3847/1538-4357/ab2393