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Published November 1, 2018 | Published + Accepted Version
Journal Article Open

MUSCLES Treasury Survey. V. FUV Flares on Active and Inactive M Dwarfs

Abstract

M dwarf stars are known for their vigorous flaring. This flaring could impact the climate of orbiting planets, making it important to characterize M dwarf flares at the short wavelengths that drive atmospheric chemistry and escape. We conducted a far-ultraviolet flare survey of six M dwarfs from the recent MUSCLES (Measurements of the Ultraviolet Spectral Characteristics of Low-mass Exoplanetary Systems) observations, as well as four highly active M dwarfs with archival data. When comparing absolute flare energies, we found the active-M-star flares to be about 10× more energetic than inactive-M-star flares. However, when flare energies were normalized by the star's quiescent flux, the active and inactive samples exhibited identical flare distributions, with a power-law index of -0.76^(+0.09)_(-0.1) (cumulative distribution). The rate and distribution of flares are such that they could dominate the FUV energy budget of M dwarfs, assuming the same distribution holds to flares as energetic as those cataloged by Kepler and ground-based surveys. We used the observed events to create an idealized model flare with realistic spectral and temporal energy budgets to be used in photochemical simulations of exoplanet atmospheres. Applied to our own simulation of direct photolysis by photons alone (no particles), we find that the most energetic observed flares have little effect on an Earth-like atmosphere, photolyzing ~0.01% of the total O_3 column. The observations were too limited temporally (73 hr cumulative exposure) to catch rare, highly energetic flares. Those that the power-law fit predicts occur monthly would photolyze ~1% of the O_3 column and those it predicts occur yearly would photolyze the full O_3 column. Whether such energetic flares occur at the rate predicted is an open question.

Additional Information

© 2018 The American Astronomical Society. Received 2018 January 29; revised 2018 August 27; accepted 2018 September 18; published 2018 November 1. Based on observations made with the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope, obtained from the data archive at the Space Telescope Science Institute. STScI is operated by the Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy, Inc., under NASA contract NAS 5-26555. The scientific results reported in this article are based in part on observations made by the Chandra X-ray Observatory. Based in part on observations obtained with XMM-Newton, an ESA science mission with instruments and contributions directly funded by ESA Member States and NASA. Parke Loyd wishes to express sincere gratitude to Adam Kowalski for illuminating discussions regarding stellar flares and Ignasi Ribas for similar discussions occasioned by an analysis of data on Proxima Centauri. Thanks is expressed to Ben Dichter for the use of the brokenaxes code (github.com/bendichter/brokenaxes). This work was supported by HST grant HST-GO-13650.01 and Chandra grants GO4-15014X and GO5-16155X to the University of Colorado at Boulder. Facilities: HST (COS - , STIS) - , CXO - , XMM. -

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Published - Loyd_2018_ApJ_867_71.pdf

Accepted Version - 1809.07322.pdf

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Created:
August 19, 2023
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October 19, 2023