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K-dwarf Radius Inflation and a 10-Gyr Spin-down Clock Unveiled through Asteroseismology of HD~219134 from the Keck Planet Finder

Authors :
Li, Yaguang
Huber, Daniel
Ong, J. M. Joel
van Saders, Jennifer
Costa, R. R.
Larsen, Jens Reersted
Basu, Sarbani
Bedding, Timothy R.
Dai, Fei
Chontos, Ashley
Carmichael, Theron W.
Hey, Daniel
Kjeldsen, Hans
Hon, Marc
Campante, Tiago L.
Monteiro, Mário J. P. F. G.
Lundkvist, Mia Sloth
Saunders, Nicholas
Isaacson, Howard
Howard, Andrew W.
Gibson, Steven R.
Halverson, Samuel
Rider, Kodi
Roy, Arpita
Baker, Ashley D.
Edelstein, Jerry
Smith, Chris
Fulton, Benjamin J.
Walawender, Josh
Publication Year :
2025

Abstract

We present the first asteroseismic analysis of the K3\,V planet host HD~219134, based on four consecutive nights of radial velocities collected with the Keck Planet Finder. We applied Gold deconvolution to the power spectrum to disentangle modes from sidelobes in the spectral window, and extracted 25 mode frequencies with spherical degrees $0\leq\ell\leq3$. We derive the fundamental properties using five different evolutionary-modeling pipelines and report a mass of 0.763 $\pm$ 0.020 (stat) $\pm$ 0.007 (sys) M$_\odot$, a radius of 0.748 $\pm$ 0.007 (stat) $\pm$ 0.002 (sys) R$_\odot$, and an age of 10.151 $\pm$ 1.520 (stat) $\pm$ 0.810 (sys) Gyr. Compared to the interferometric radius 0.783 $\pm$ 0.005~R$_\odot$, the asteroseismic radius is 4\% smaller at the 4-$\sigma$ level -- a discrepancy not easily explained by known interferometric systematics, modeling assumptions on atmospheric boundary conditions and mixing lengths, magnetic fields, or tidal heating. HD~219134 is the first main-sequence star cooler than 5000~K with an asteroseismic age estimate and will serve as a critical calibration point for stellar spin-down relations. We show that existing calibrated prescriptions for angular momentum loss, incorporating weakened magnetic braking with asteroseismically constrained stellar parameters, accurately reproduce the observed rotation period. Additionally, we revised the masses and radii of the super-Earths in the system, which support their having Earth-like compositions. Finally, we confirm that the oscillation amplitude in radial velocity scales as $(L/M)^{1.5}$ in K dwarfs, in contrast to the $(L/M)^{0.7}$ relation observed in G dwarfs. These findings provide significant insights into the structure and angular momentum loss of K-type stars.<br />Comment: 23 pages, 11 figures. submitted to AAS Journals. Comments welcome

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2502.00971
Document Type :
Working Paper