Rotationally Driven Ultraviolet Emission of Red Giant Stars II. Metallicity, Activity, Binarity and Sub-subgiants
Abstract
Red Giant Branch (RGB) stars are overwhelmingly observed to rotate very slowly compared to main-sequence stars, but a few percent of them show rapid rotation and high activity, often as a result of tidal synchronizationn or other angular momentum transfer events. In this paper we build upon previous work using a sample of 7,286 RGB stars from APOGEE DR17 with measurable rotation. We derive an updated NUV excess vs v i rotation-activity relation that is consistent with our previous published version, but reduces uncertainty through the inclusion of a linear [M/H] correction term. We find that both single stars and binary stars generally follow our rotation-activity relation, but single stars seemingly saturate at Prot/i 10 days while binary stars show no sign of saturation, suggesting they are able to carry substantially stronger magnetic fields. Our analysis reveals Sub-subgiant stars (SSGs) to be the most active giant binaries, with rotation synchronized to orbits with periods 20 days. Given their unusually high level of activity compared to other short-period synchronized giants we suspect the SSGs are most commonly overactive RS CVn stars. Using estimates of critical rotation we identify a handful giants rotating near break-up and determine tidal spin up to this level of rotation is highly unlikely and instead suggest planetary engulfment or stellar mergers in a fashion generally proposed for FK Comae stars.
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