We report on an X-ray flare detected on the active binary system II~Pegasi
with the Swift telescope. The trigger had a 10-200 keV luminosity of
2.2×1032 erg s−1-- a superflare, by comparison with energies of
typical stellar flares on active binary systems. The trigger spectrum indicates
a hot thermal plasma with T∼180 ×106K. X-ray spectral analysis
from 0.8--200 keV with the X-Ray Telescope and BAT in the next two orbits
reveals evidence for a thermal component (T>80 ×106K) and Fe K 6.4
keV emission. A tail of emission out to 200 keV can be fit with either an
extremely high temperature thermal plasma (T∼3×108K) or power-law
emission. Based on analogies with solar flares, we attribute the excess
continuum emission to nonthermal thick-target bremsstrahlung emission from a
population of accelerated electrons. We estimate the radiated energy from
0.01--200 keV to be ∼6×1036 erg, the total radiated energy over
all wavelengths ∼1038 erg, the energy in nonthermal electrons above 20
keV ∼3×1040 erg, and conducted energy <5×1043 erg. The
nonthermal interpretation gives a reasonable value for the total energy in
electrons > 20 keV when compared to the upper and lower bounds on the thermal
energy content of the flare. This marks the first occasion in which evidence
exists for nonthermal hard X-ray emission from a stellar flare. We investigate
the emission mechanism responsible for producing the 6.4 keV feature, and find
that collisional ionization from nonthermal electrons appears to be more
plausible than the photoionization mechanism usually invoked on the Sun and
pre-main sequence stars.Comment: 41 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in the Astrophysical
Journa