Solar analog explained

Solar-type stars, solar analogs (also analogues), and solar twins are stars that are particularly similar to the Sun. The stellar classification is a hierarchy with solar twin being most like the Sun followed by solar analog and then solar-type. Observations of these stars are important for understanding better the properties of the Sun in relation to other stars and the habitability of planets.

By similarity to the Sun

Defining the three categories by their similarity to the Sun reflects the evolution of astronomical observational techniques. Originally, solar-type was the closest that similarity to the Sun could be defined. Later, more precise measurement techniques and improved observatories allowed for greater precision of key details like temperature, enabling the creation of a solar analog category for stars that were particularly similar to the Sun. Later still, continued improvements in precision allowed for the creation of a solar-twin category for near-perfect matches.

Similarity to the Sun allows for checking derived quantities—such as temperature, which is derived from the color index—against the Sun, the only star whose temperature is confidently known. For stars that are not similar to the Sun, this cross-checking cannot be done.

Solar-type

These stars are broadly similar to the Sun. They are main-sequence stars with a B−V color between 0.48 and 0.80, the Sun having a B−V color of 0.65. Alternatively, a definition based on spectral type can be used, such as F8V through K2V, which would correspond to B−V color of 0.50 to 1.00. This definition fits approximately 10% of stars, so a list of solar-type stars would be quite extensive.[1]

Solar-type stars show highly correlated behavior between their rotation rates and their chromospheric activity (e.g. Calcium H & K line emission) and coronal activity (e.g. X-ray emission)[2] Because solar-type stars spin down during their main-sequence lifetimes due to magnetic braking, these correlations allow rough ages to be derived. Mamajek & Hillenbrand (2008) have estimated the ages for the 108 solar-type (F8V–K2V) main-sequence stars within 52 light-years (16 parsecs) of the Sun based on their chromospheric activity (as measured via Ca, H, and K emission lines).

The following table shows a sample of solar-type stars within 50 light years that nearly satisfy the criteria for solar analogs (B−V color between 0.48 and 0.80), based on current measurements (the Sun is listed for comparison):

Sample of solar-type stars
IdentifierJ2000 coordinatesDistance
(ly)
Stellar
class
Temperature
(K)
Metallicity
(dex)
Age
(Gyr)
Notes
Right ascensionDeclination
Sun0.0000158G2V5778+0.004.6
4.37G2V5790+0.204.4
Toliman4.37K0V52604.4
10.4K2V5084-0.130.4-0.8
11.9G8V5344–0.525.8
19.8G8V5338–0.546.1
19.9G8IV5604+0.33~7
39.9K1V5257−0.203.7
41.3G5V5432−0.469.6
42.1G8IV5538+0.188.5
42.7G5V5610−0.324.3
46.9G0V5662−0.375
46.9G8V5415−0.316.6
47.5G4V5664−0.3410.3

Solar analog

These stars are photometrically similar to the Sun, having the following qualities:

Solar analogs not meeting the stricter solar twin criteria include, within 50 light years and in order of increasing distance (The Sun is listed for comparison.):

IdentifierJ2000 coordinatesDistance
(ly)
Stellar
class
Temperature
(K)
Metallicity
(dex)
Age
(Gyr)
Notes
Right ascensionDeclination
Sun0.0000158G2V5,778+0.004.6
18.8G9–K0 V5,297−0.204.7
27.4G0V5,930−0.306.0
27.8G5V5,558−0.026.3
28.0F9.5V5,956−0.142.5
29.8G0V5,970−0.062.0
31.1G8V5,483−0.121.0
32.8K0V5,333+0.053.0
33.1G5V5,594+0.105.4
40.6K0V5,410−0.0310.6
41.2G1.5V5,848−0.057.0
42.0G1V5,858+0.030.4
43.3G3V5,868+0.020.6
45.9G1V5,954+0.066.0
47.8G5V5,6830.043.2
48.5F8V6,167−0.033.1
48.6G3V5,878−0.031.2
49.1G3V5,741+0.206.5
49.3F8V6,140+0.185.7
50.9G2.5IVa5,804+0.207.0

Solar twin

To date no solar twin that exactly matches the Sun has been found.[3] However, there are some stars that come very close to being identical to the Sun, and are such considered solar twins by members of the astronomical community. An exact solar twin would be a G2V star with a 5,778 K surface temperature, be 4.6 billion years old, with the correct metallicity and a 0.1% solar luminosity variation.[4] Stars with an age of 4.6 billion years are at the most stable state. Proper metallicity, radius, chemical composition, rotation, magnetic activity, and size are also very important to low luminosity variation.[5] [6] [7] [8]

The stars below are more similar to the Sun and having the following qualities:

Other Sun parameters:[9]


The following are the known stars that come closest to satisfying the criteria for a solar twin. The Sun is listed for comparison. Highlighted boxes are out of range for a solar twin. The star may have been noted as solar twin in the past, but are more of a solar analog.

IdentifierJ2000 coordinatesDistance
(ly)
Stellar
class
Temperature
(K)
Metallicity
(dex)
Age
(Gyr)
Notes
Right ascensionDeclination
Sun0.0000158G2V5,778+0.004.6
45.1G2Va5,433−0.032.9
88G25,750−0.046.2
91G25,810−0.064.5
92G55,760−0.042.9
98G35,730−0.106.1
99G5IV–V5,757+0.007.1
124G25,701−0.0758.1
135G4V5,759−0.022.3
141G05,768+0.003.8 (±2.9)
154G2V5,749−0.028.2
171G05,808+0.026.3
184G35,675+0.004.5
190G5V5,760–0.0594.1[11]
208G5V5,795+0.027.1
250G3V5,723−0.0138.2
1400G2V5,757+0.216.0[12]
2934G5V5,780+0.023~ 4.2 (± 1.6)

Some other stars are sometimes mentioned as solar-twin candidates such as: Beta Canum Venaticorum; however it has too low metallicities (−0.21) for solar twin. 16 Cygni B is sometimes noted as twin, but is part of a triple star system and is very old for a solar twin at 6.8 Ga. Two solar sibling candidates (similar age, metallicity (−0.113), and kinematics) are Gaia DR2 1927143514955658880 and 1966383465746413568.[13]

By potential habitability

Another way of defining solar twin is as a "habstar"—a star with qualities believed to be particularly hospitable to a life-hosting planet. Qualities considered include variability, mass, age, metallicity, and close companions.

The requirement that the star remain on the main sequence for at least 0.5–1 Ga sets an upper limit of approximately 2.2–3.4 solar masses, corresponding to a hottest spectral type of A0-B7V. Such stars can be 100x as bright as the Sun.[14] Tardigrade-like life (due to the UV flux) could potentially survive on planets orbiting stars as hot as B1V, with a mass of 10 M☉, and a temperature of 25,000 K, a main-sequence lifetime of about 20 million years.

Non-variability is ideally defined as variability of less than 1%, but 3% is the practical limit due to limits in available data. Variation in irradiance in a star's habitable zone due to a companion star with an eccentric orbit is also a concern.[6] [7] [8]

Terrestrial planets in multiple star systems, those containing three or more stars, are not likely to have stable orbits in the long term. Stable orbits in binary systems take one of two forms: S-Type (satellite or circumstellar) orbits around one of the stars, and P-Type (planetary or circumbinary) orbits around the entire binary pair. Eccentric Jupiters may also disrupt the orbits of planets in habitable zones.

Metallicity of at least 40% solar ([Fe/H] = −0.4) is required for the formation of an Earth-like terrestrial planet. High metallicity strongly correlates to the formation of hot Jupiters, but these are not absolute bars to life, as some gas giants end up orbiting within the habitable zone themselves, and could potentially host Earth-like moons.

One example of such a star is, a G5V, at temperature of 5533 K, but is much younger than the Sun, at 1.9 billion years old.[15]

Another such example would be HIP 11915, which has a planetary system containing a Jupiter-like planet orbiting at a similar distance that the planet Jupiter does in the Solar System.[16] To strengthen the similarities, the star is class G5V, has a temperature of 5750 K, has a Sun-like mass and radius, and is only 500 million years younger than the Sun. As such, the habitable zone would extend in the same area as the zone in the Solar System, around 1 AU. This would allow an Earth-like planet to exist around 1 AU.[17]

See also

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Web site: The Classification of Stars. www.atlasoftheuniverse.com.
  2. Chromospheric variations in main-sequence stars. S. L.. Baliunas. R. A.. Donahue. J. H.. Soon. J. H.. Horne. J.. Frazer. L.. Woodard-Eklund. M.. Bradford. L. M.. Rao. O. C.. Wilson. Q.. Zhang. January 1, 1995. Astrophysical Journal, Part 1. 438. 1. ntrs.nasa.gov.
  3. Web site: Solar Variability and Terrestrial Climate - NASA Science. science.nasa.gov.
  4. Web site: Solar Variability and Terrestrial Climate - NASA Science. science.nasa.gov.
  5. Solar twins in the ELODIE archive. D.. Mahdi. C.. Soubiran. S.. Blanco-Cuaresma. L.. Chemin. March 1, 2016. Astronomy & Astrophysics. 587. A131. www.aanda.org. 10.1051/0004-6361/201527472. 1601.01599. 2016A&A...587A.131M .
  6. Web site: Stellar Luminosity Calculator. astro.unl.edu.
  7. Web site: The Effects of Solar Variability on Earth's Climate: A Workshop Report. November 12, 2012. National Academies Press.
  8. Web site: Most of Earth's twins aren't identical, or even close! | ScienceBlogs. scienceblogs.com.
  9. 15.1 The Structure and Composition of the Sun. January 23, 2017. pressbooks.online.ucf.edu.
  10. http://aa.springer.de/papers/0363003/2300947.pdf Bjarne Rosenkilde Jørgensen, “The G Dwarf Problem: Analysis of a New Data Set,” Astronomy & Astrophysics 363, November 2000, 947
  11. M. Bedell . J. Meléndez . J. L. Bean . I. Ramírez . M. Asplund . A. Alves-Brito . L. Casagrande . S. Dreizler . T. Monroe . L. Spina . M. Tucci Maia . The Solar Twin Planet Search II. A Jupiter twin around a solar twin. Astronomy and Astrophysics. 581 . June 26, 2015. 8. 17 July 2015. 2015A&A...581A..34B . 1507.03998 . 10.1051/0004-6361/201525748 . 56004595 .
  12. Encyclopedia: Planet Kepler-452 b. Extrasolar Planets Encyclopaedia. 6 July 2016.
  13. de la Fuente Marcos . Carlos . de la Fuente Marcos . Raúl . 11 October 2019 . Comet C/2018 V1 (Machholz–Fujikawa–Iwamoto): dislodged from the Oort Cloud or coming from interstellar space?. . 489. 1. 951–961. 1908.02666. 2019MNRAS.489..951D. 10.1093/mnras/stz2229.
  14. Web site: Double-Star Systems Can Be Dangerous for Exoplanets. Mike Wall. January 6, 2013. Space.com.
  15. News: Solar System 'twin' found . BBC News . 2003-07-03.
  16. Web site: Jupiter Twin Discovered Around Solar Twin . eso.org/. 16 July 2015.
  17. Web site: Solar Variability and Terrestrial Climate – NASA Science. 8 January 2013.