4.6 Article

The age-activity-rotation relationship in solar-type stars

Journal

ASTRONOMY & ASTROPHYSICS
Volume 426, Issue 3, Pages 1021-1034

Publisher

EDP SCIENCES S A
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:20040568

Keywords

stars : late-type; stars : activity; stars : chromosphere; stars : rotation

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We present Ca II K line chromospheric fluxes measured from high-resolution spectra in 35 G dwarf stars of 5 open clusters to determine the age-activity-rotation relationship from the young Hyades and Praesepe (0.6 Gyr) to the old M 67 (similar to4.5 Gyr) through the two intermediate age clusters IC 4651 and NGC3680 (similar to1.7 Gyr). The full amplitude of the activity index within a cluster is slightly above 60 % for all clusters but one, NGC 3680, in which only two stars were observed. As a comparison, the same Solar Ca II index varies by similar to40% during a solar cycle. Four of our clusters (Hyades and Praesepe, IC4651 and NGC 3680) are pairs of twins as far as age is concerned; the Hyades have the same chromospheric-activity level as Praesepe, at odds with early claims based on X-ray observations. Both stars in NGC 3680 are indistinguishable, as far as chromospheric activity is concerned, from those in the coeval IC 4651. This is a validation of the existence of an age-activity relationship. On the other hand, the two intermediate age clusters have the same activity level as the much older M 67 and the Sun. Our data therefore shows that a dramatic decrease in chromospheric activity takes place in solar stars between the Hyades and the IC 4651 age, of about 1 Gyr. Afterwards, activity remains virtually constant for more than 3 Gyr. We have also measured v sin i for all of our stars and the average rotational velocity shows the same trend as the chromospheric-activity index. We briefly investigate the impact of this result on the age determinations of field G dwarfs in the solar neighborhood; the two main conclusions are that a consistent group of young stars (i.e. as active as Hyades stars) is present, and that it is virtually impossible to give accurate chromospheric ages for stars older than similar to2 Gyr. The observed abrupt decline in activity explains very well the Vaughan-Preston gap.

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