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|a dc
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|a Irwin, Jonathan
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|a MIT Kavli Institute for Astrophysics and Space Research
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|a Newton, Elisabeth R
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|a Charbonneau, David
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|a Berlind, Perry
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|a Calkins, Michael L.
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|a Mink, Jessica
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|a Newton, Elisabeth R
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|a THE Hα EMISSION OF NEARBY M DWARFS AND ITS RELATION TO STELLAR ROTATION
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|b IOP Publishing,
|c 2017-06-08T13:59:53Z.
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|z Get fulltext
|u http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/109733
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|a The high-energy emission from low-mass stars is mediated by the magnetic dynamo. Although the mechanisms by which fully convective stars generate large-scale magnetic fields are not well understood, it is clear that, as for solar-type stars, stellar rotation plays a pivotal role. We present 270 new optical spectra of low-mass stars in the Solar Neighborhood. Combining our observations with those from the literature, our sample comprises 2202 measurements or non-detections of Hα emission in nearby M dwarfs. This includes 466 with photometric rotation periods. Stars with masses between 0.1 and 0.6 M[subscript ⊙] are well-represented in our sample, with fast and slow rotators of all masses. We observe a threshold in the mass-period plane that separates active and inactive M dwarfs. The threshold coincides with the fast-period edge of the slowly rotating population, at approximately the rotation period at which an era of rapid rotational evolution appears to cease. The well-defined active/inactive boundary indicates that Hα activity is a useful diagnostic for stellar rotation period, e.g., for target selection for exoplanet surveys, and we present a mass-period relation for inactive M dwarfs. We also find a significant, moderate correlation between L[suscript Hα]/L[subscript bol] and variability amplitude: more active stars display higher levels of photometric variability. Consistent with previous work, our data show that rapid rotators maintain a saturated value of LHα/Lbol. Our data also show a clear power-law decay in L[subscript Hα]/L[subscript bol] with Rossby number for slow rotators, with an index of −1.7 ± 0.1.
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|a National Science Foundation (U.S.). Astronomy and Astrophysics Postdoctoral Fellowship (Award AST-1602597)
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|a en_US
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|a Article
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|t The Astrophysical Journal
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