Investigation of stellar magnetic activity using variational autoencoder based on low-resolution spectroscopic survey
This work addresses the problem of identifying magnetically active stars for astronomers, using an incremental approach by adapting existing VAE methods to low-resolution spectroscopic data.
The study tackled the detection of stellar magnetic activity by applying a variational autoencoder (VAE) to low-resolution spectra from the LAMOST-K2 survey, achieving good correlation between excess emissions of Hα and Ca II IRT lines with rotational periods and light curve amplitudes, and demonstrating the method's applicability to future surveys like CSST with simulated data.
We apply the variational autoencoder (VAE) to the LAMOST-K2 low-resolution spectra to detect the magnetic activity of the stars in the K2 field. After the training on the spectra of the selected inactive stars, the VAE model can efficiently generate the synthetic reference templates needed by the spectral subtraction procedure, without knowing any stellar parameters. Then we detect the peculiar spectral features, such as chromospheric emissions, strong nebular emissions and lithium absorptions, in our sample. We measure the emissions of the chromospheric activity indicators, H$α$ and Ca II infrared triplet (IRT) lines, to quantify the stellar magnetic activity. The excess emissions of H$α$ and Ca II IRT lines of the active stars are correlated well to the rotational periods and the amplitudes of light curves derived from the K2 photometry. We degrade the LAMOST spectra to simulate the slitless spectra of the China Space Station Telescope (CSST) and apply the VAE to the simulated data. For cool active stars, we reveal a good agreement between the equivalent widths (EWs) of H$α$ line derived from the spectra with two resolutions. The result indicates the ability of identifying the magnetically active stars in the future CSST survey, which will deliver an unprecedented large database of low-resolution spectra as well as simultaneous multi-band photometry of stars.