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For seven decades, the widely held view has been that the formation, the migration and the decay of short-lived starspots explain the constantly changing light curves of chromospherically active stars. Our hypothesis is that these deceptive observed light curves are interference of two real constant period light curves of long-lived starspots. The slow motion of these long-lived starspots with respect to each other causes the observed light curve changes. This hypothesis contradicts the current views of starspots. Therefore, we subject it to eight reproducible tests. Our new period finding method detects the two real light curves of FK Com. Our hypothesis is a total success: all real light curve parameters are directly connected to the long-lived starspots which are also seen in the Doppler images of FK Com.These parameters are spatially and temporally correlated just like in the Sun, including weak solar-like surface differential rotation. As for other chromospherically active stars, all eight reproducible tests also support our hypothesis. It explains many spurious phenomena: the rapid light curve changes, the short starspot life-times, the rapid rotation period changes, the active longitudes, the starspot migration, the period cycles, the amplitude cycles and the minimum epoch cycles. It also explains why the light curves and the Doppler images give contradicting surface differential rotation estimates even for the same individual star, as well as the abrupt 180 degrees shifts of activity (the flip-flop events) and the long-term mean light curves. We argue that the current views of starspots need to be revised.
Recently, we presented a general model for the light curves of chromospherically active stars, where the observed light curve is interference of two real constant period light curves of long-lived starspots. In this first paper, we make six specific
FK Comae is a rapidly rotating magnetically active star, the light curve of which is modulated by cool spots on its surface. It was the first star where the flip-flop phenomenon was discovered. Since then, flip-flops in the spot activity have been re
COCOA-PUFS is an energy-diverse, time-domain study of the ultra-fast spinning, heavily spotted, yellow giant FK Com (HD117555; G4 III). This single star is thought to be a recent binary merger, and is exceptionally active by measure of its intense ul
We study the connection between the chromospheric and photospheric behaviour of the active late-type star FK Comae. We use spot temperature modelling, light curve inversion based on narrow- and wide-band photometric measurements, Halpha observations
We present a three-dimensional simulation of the corona of an FK Com-type rapidly rotating G giant using a magnetohydrodynamic model that was originally developed for the solar corona in order to capture the more realistic, non-potential coronal stru