1 research outputs found
Impact of Stellar Superflares on Planetary Habitability
High-energy radiation caused by exoplanetary space weather events from
planet-hosting stars can play a crucial role in conditions promoting or
destroying habitability in addition to the conventional factors. In this paper,
we present the first quantitative impact evaluation system of stellar flares on
the habitability factors with an emphasis on the impact of Stellar Proton
Events. We derive the maximum flare energy from stellar starspot sizes and
examine the impacts of flare associated ionizing radiation on CO, H,
N+O --rich atmospheres of a number of well-characterized terrestrial
type exoplanets. Our simulations based on the Particle and Heavy Ion Transport
code System [PHITS] suggest that the estimated ground level dose for each
planet in the case of terrestrial-level atmospheric pressure (1 bar) for each
exoplanet does not exceed the critical dose for complex (multi-cellular) life
to persist, even for the planetary surface of Proxima Centauri b, Ross-128 b
and TRAPPIST-1 e. However, when we take into account the effects of the
possible maximum flares from those host stars, the estimated dose reaches fatal
levels at the terrestrial lowest atmospheric depth on TRAPPIST-1 e and Ross-128
b. Large fluxes of coronal XUV radiation from active stars induces high
atmospheric escape rates from close-in exoplanets suggesting that the
atmospheric depth can be substantially smaller than that on the Earth. In a
scenario with the atmospheric thickness of 1/10 of Earth's, the radiation dose
from close-in planets including Proxima Centauri b and TRAPPIST-1 e reach near
fatal dose levels with annual frequency of flare occurrence from their
hoststars.Comment: 37 pages, 19 figures, 4 tables. Accepted for publication in The
Astrophysical Journal (on June 16, 2019), Version 2 (fixed typo