Context. The Sun and solar-like stars undergo activity cycles for which the
underlying mechanisms are not well understood. The oscillations of the Sun are
known to vary with its activity cycle and these changes provide diagnostics on
the conditions below the photosphere. Kepler has detected oscillations in
hundreds of solar-like stars but as of yet, no widespread detection of
signatures of magnetic activity cycles in the oscillation parameters of these
stars have been reported.
Aims. We analyse the photometric short cadence Kepler time series of a set of
24 solar-like stars, which were observed for at least 960 days each, with the
aim to find signatures of stellar magnetic activity in the oscillation
parameters.
Methods. We analyse the temporal evolution of oscillation parameters by
measuring mode frequency shifts, changes in the height of the p-mode envelope,
as well as granulation time scales.
Results. For 23 of the 24 investigated stars, we find significant frequency
shifts in time. We present evidence for magnetic activity in six of them. We
find that the amplitude of the frequency shifts decreases with stellar age and
rotation period. For the most prominent example, KIC 8006161, we find that,
similar to the solar case, frequency shifts are smallest for the lowest and
largest for the highest p-mode frequencies.
Conclusions. These findings show that magnetic activity can be routinely
observed in the oscillation parameters for solar-like stars, which opens up the
possibility to place the solar activity cycle in the context of other stars by
asteroseismology.Comment: 25 pages, 34 figures. Accepted for publication in Astronomy &
Astrophysic