The Astronomical Journal (Jan 2024)

Methods for the Detection of Stellar Rotation Periods in Individual TESS Sectors and Results from the Prime Mission

  • Isabel L. Colman,
  • Ruth Angus,
  • Trevor David,
  • Jason Curtis,
  • Soichiro Hattori,
  • Yuxi (Lucy) Lu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-3881/ad2c86
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 167, no. 5
p. 189

Abstract

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For ongoing studies of the role of rotation in stellar evolution, we require large catalogs of rotation periods for testing and refining gyrochronology. While there is a wealth of data from the Kepler and K2 missions, the Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS) presents both an opportunity and a challenge: despite its all-sky coverage, rotation periods remain hard to detect. We analyzed individual TESS sectors to detect short-period stellar rotation, using only parameters measured from light curves for a robust and unbiased method of evaluating detections. We used random forest classifiers for vetting, trained on a large corpus of period measurements in Kilodegree Extremely Little Telescope data from the Oelkers et al. catalog and using TESS full-frame image light curves generated by eleanor . Finally, using data from the first 26 sectors of TESS, we analyzed 432,704 2 minutes cadence single-sector light curves for FGKM dwarfs. We detected 16,800 periods in individual sector light curves, covering 10,909 distinct targets, and we present a catalog of the median period for each target as measured by a Lomb–Scargle periodogram.

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