A multi-wavelength view of the multiple activity cycles of ε~Eridani
Abstract
ε Eridani is a highly active young K2 star with an activity cycle of about three years established using Ca II H & K line index measurements (SMWO). This relatively short cycle has been demonstrated to be consistent with X-ray and magnetic flux measurements. Recent work suggested a change in the cyclic behaviour. Here we report new X-ray flux and SMWO measurements and also include SMWO measurements from the historical Mount Wilson program. This results in an observational time baseline of over 50 years for the SMWO data and of over 7 years in X-rays. Moreover, we include Ca II infrared triplet (IRT) index measurements (SIRT) from 2013-2022 in our study. With the extended X-ray data set, we can now detect the short cycle for the first time using a periodogram analysis. Near-simultaneous SMWO data and X-ray fluxes, which are offset by 20 days at most, are moderately strongly correlated when only the lowest activity state (concerning short-term variability) is considered in both diagnostics. In the SMWO data, we find strong evidence for a much longer cycle of about 34 years and an 11-year cycle instead of the formerly proposed 12-year cycle in addition to the known 3-year cycle. The superposition of the three periods naturally explains the recent drop in SMWO measurements. The two shorter cycles are also detected in the SIRT data, although the activity cycles exhibit lower amplitudes in the SIRT than in the SMWO data. Finally, the rotation period of εEri can be found more frequently in the SMWO as well as in the SIRT data for times near the minimum of the long cycle. This may be explained by a scenario in which the filling factor for magnetically active regions near cycle maximum is too high to allow for notable short-term variations.
Turn this paper into a lesson
ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.