224 research outputs found
Quantification of the environment of cool stars using numerical simulations
Stars interact with their planets through gravitation, radiation, and
magnetic fields. Although magnetic activity decreases with time, reducing
associated high-energy (e.g., coronal XUV emission, flares), stellar winds
persist throughout the entire evolution of the system. Their cumulative effect
will be dominant for both the star and for possible orbiting exoplanets,
affecting in this way the expected habitability conditions. However,
observations of stellar winds in low-mass main sequence stars are limited,
which motivates the usage of models as a pathway to explore how these winds
look like and how they behave. Here we present the results from a grid of 3D
state-of-the-art stellar wind models for cool stars (spectral types F to M). We
explore the role played by the different stellar properties (mass, radius,
rotation, magnetic field) on the characteristics of the resulting magnetized
winds (mass and angular momentum losses, terminal speeds, wind topology) and
isolate the most important dependencies between the parameters involved. These
results will be used to establish scaling laws that will complement the lack of
stellar wind observational constraints
The Stellar CME-flare relation: What do historic observations reveal?
Solar CMEs and flares have a statistically well defined relation, with more
energetic X-ray flares corresponding to faster and more massive CMEs. How this
relation extends to more magnetically active stars is a subject of open
research. Here, we study the most probable stellar CME candidates associated
with flares captured in the literature to date, all of which were observed on
magnetically active stars. We use a simple CME model to derive masses and
kinetic energies from observed quantities, and transform associated flare data
to the GOES 1--8~\AA\ band. Derived CME masses range from to
~g. Associated flare X-ray energies range from to
~erg. Stellar CME masses as a function of associated flare energy
generally lie along or below the extrapolated mean for solar events. In
contrast, CME kinetic energies lie below the analogous solar extrapolation by
roughly two orders of magnitude, indicating approximate parity between flare
X-ray and CME kinetic energies. These results suggest that the CMEs associated
with very energetic flares on active stars are more limited in terms of the
ejecta velocity than the ejecta mass, possibly because of the restraining
influence of strong overlying magnetic fields and stellar wind drag. Lower CME
kinetic energies and velocities present a more optimistic scenario for the
effects of CME impacts on exoplanets in close proximity to active stellar
hosts.Comment: 23 pages, 3 tables, 4 figures, accepted by Ap
Stellar Energetic Particle Transport in the Turbulent and CME-disrupted Stellar Wind of AU~Microscopii
Energetic particles emitted by active stars are likely to propagate in
astrospheric magnetized plasma turbulent and disrupted by the prior passage of
energetic Coronal Mass Ejections (CMEs). We carried out test-particle
simulations of GeV protons produced at a variety of distances from the
M1Ve star AU~Microscopii by coronal flares or travelling shocks. Particles are
propagated within the large-scale quiescent three-dimensional magnetic field
and stellar wind reconstructed from measured magnetograms, and { within the
same stellar environment following passage of a ~erg kinetic energy
CME}. In both cases, magnetic fluctuations with an isotropic power spectrum are
overlayed onto the large scale stellar magnetic field and particle propagation
out to the two innnermost confirmed planets is examined. In the quiescent case,
the magnetic field concentrates the particles onto two regions near the
ecliptic plane. After the passage of the CME, the closed field lines remain
inflated and the re-shuffled magnetic field remains highly compressed,
shrinking the scattering mean free path of the particles. In the direction of
propagation of the CME-lobes the subsequent EP flux is suppressed. Even for a
CME front propagating out of the ecliptic plane, the EP flux along the
planetary orbits highly fluctuates and peaks at orders of magnitude
higher than the average solar value at Earth, both in the quiescent and the
post-CME cases.Comment: 19 pages, 14 figures, submitte
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Revisiting the Space Weather Environment of Proxima Centauri b
Close-in planets orbiting around low-mass stars are exposed to intense energetic photon and particle radiation and harsh space weather. We have modeled such conditions for Proxima Centauri b, a rocky planet orbiting in the habitable zone of our closest neighboring star, finding a stellar wind pressure 3 orders of magnitude higher than the solar wind pressure on Earth. At that time, no Zeeman-Doppler observations of the surface magnetic field distribution of Proxima Cen were available and a proxy from a star with a similar Rossby number to Proxima was used to drive the MHD model. Recently, the first Zeeman-Doppler imaging (ZDI) observation of Proxima Cen became available. We have modeled Proxima b’s space weather using this map and compared it with the results from the proxy magnetogram. We also computed models for a high-resolution synthetic magnetogram for Proxima b generated by a state-of-the-art dynamo model. The resulting space weather conditions for these three scenarios are similar with only small differences found between the models based on the ZDI observed magnetogram and the proxy. We conclude that our proxy magnetogram prescription based on the Rossby number is valid, and provides a simple way to estimate stellar magnetic flux distributions when no direct observations are available. Comparisons with models based on the synthetic magnetogram show that the exact magnetogram details are not important for predicting global space weather conditions of planets, reinforcing earlier conclusions that the large-scale (low-order) field dominates, and that the small-scale field does not have much influence on the ambient stellar wind
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Stellar Energetic Particle Transport in the Turbulent and CME-disrupted Stellar Wind of AU Microscopii
Energetic particles emitted by active stars are likely to propagate in astrospheric magnetized plasma and disrupted by the prior passage of energetic coronal mass ejections (CMEs). We carried out test-particle simulations of ∼GeV protons produced at a variety of distances from the M1Ve star AU Microscopii by coronal flares or traveling shocks. Particles are propagated within a large-scale quiescent three-dimensional magnetic field and stellar wind reconstructed from measured magnetograms, and within the same stellar environment following the passage of a 1036 erg kinetic energy CME. In both cases, magnetic fluctuations with an isotropic power spectrum are overlayed onto the large-scale stellar magnetic field and particle propagation out to the two innnermost confirmed planets is examined. In the quiescent case, the magnetic field concentrates the particles into two regions near the ecliptic plane. After the passage of the CME, the closed field lines remain inflated and the reshuffled magnetic field remains highly compressed, shrinking the scattering mean free path of the particles. In the direction of propagation of the CME lobes the subsequent energetic particle (EP) flux is suppressed. Even for a CME front propagating out of the ecliptic plane, the EP flux along the planetary orbits highly fluctuates and peaks at ∼2-3 orders of magnitude higher than the average solar value at Earth, both in the quiescent and the post-CME cases
Coronal Mass Ejections and Exoplanets: A Numerical Perspective
Coronal mass ejections (CMEs) are more energetic than any other class of
solar phenomena. They arise from the rapid release of up to erg of
magnetic energy mainly in the form of particle acceleration and bulk plasma
motion. Their stellar counterparts, presumably involving much larger energies,
are expected to play a fundamental role in shaping the environmental conditions
around low-mass stars, in some cases perhaps with catastrophic consequences for
planetary systems due to processes such as atmospheric erosion and depletion.
Despite their importance, the direct observational evidence for stellar CMEs is
almost non-existent. In this way, numerical simulations constitute extremely
valuable tools to shed some light on eruptive behavior in the stellar regime.
Here we review recent results obtained from realistic modeling of CMEs in
active stars, highlighting their key role in the interpretation of currently
available observational constraints. We include studies performed on M-dwarf
stars, focusing on how emerging signatures in different wavelengths related to
these events vary as a function of the magnetic properties of the star.
Finally, the implications and relevance of these numerical results are
discussed in the context of future characterization of host star-exoplanet
systems.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figures, Accepted for publication in Astronomical Notes
(Astronomische Nachrichten). Based on an invited review talk at the
XMM-Newton Science Workshop 2021: "A High-Energy View of Exoplanets and Their
Environments
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