A&A 416, 713-732 (2004)
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:20031471
Flares from small to large: X-ray spectroscopy of Proxima Centauri with XMM-Newton
M. Güdel1, M. Audard2, F. Reale3, S. L. Skinner4 and J. L. Linsky51 Paul Scherrer Institut, Würenlingen & Villigen, 5232 Villigen PSI, Switzerland
e-mail: guedel@astro.phys.ethz.ch
2 Columbia Astrophysics Laboratory, Columbia University, 550 West 120th Street, New York, NY 10027, USA
e-mail: audard@astro.columbia.edu
3 Dipartimento di Scienze Fisiche & Astronomiche, Sezione di Astronomia, Università di Palermo, Piazza del Parlamento 1, 90134 Palermo, Italy
e-mail: reale@astropa.unipa.it
4 Center for Astrophysics and Space Astronomy, University of Colorado, Boulder, CO 80309-0389, USA
e-mail: skinners@casa.colorado.edu
5 JILA, University of Colorado and NIST, Boulder, CO 80309-0440, USA
e-mail: jlinsky@jila.colorado.edu
(Received 25 June 2003 / Accepted 9 September 2003 )
Abstract
We report results from a comprehensive study of the nearby M dwarf Proxima
Centauri with the XMM-Newton satellite, using simultaneously its X-ray detectors and
the Optical Monitor with its
U band filter.
We find strongly variable coronal X-ray emission, with flares ranging over a factor of 100
in peak flux. The low-level emission is found to be continuously variable on at least three time scales
(a slow decay of several hours, modulation on a time scale of 1 hr, and weak flares with
time scales of a few minutes). Several weak flares are characteristically preceded by an
optical burst, compatible with predictions from standard solar flare models.
We propose that the
U band bursts are proxies
for the elusive stellar non-thermal hard X-ray bursts suggested from solar observations.
In the course of the observation, a very large X-ray flare started and was observed essentially
in its entirety. Its peak luminosity reached
erg s
-1
[0.15-10 keV], and the total X-ray energy released in the same band is derived to be
ergs. This flare has for the first time allowed to measure significant density variations
across several phases of the flare from X-ray spectroscopy of the O VII He-like triplet; we find peak
densities reaching up to
cm
-3 for plasma of about 1-5 MK. Abundance
ratios show little variability in time, with a tendency of
elements with a high first ionization potential to be overabundant relative to solar photospheric
values. Using Fe XVII lines with different oscillator strengths, we do not find significant
effects due to opacity during the flare, indicating that large opacity increases are not the
rule even in extreme flares.
We model the large flare in terms of an analytic 2-Ribbon flare model and find that the
flaring loop system should have large characteristic sizes (
1
R*) within the framework of
this simplistic model. These results are supported by full hydrodynamic simulations.
Comparing the large flare to flares of similar
size occurring much more frequently on more active stars, we propose that the X-ray properties
of active stars are a consequence of superimposed flares such as the example
analyzed in this paper. Since
larger flares produce hotter plasma, such a model also explains why, during episodes of
low-level emission, more active stars show hotter plasma than less active stars.
Key words: stars: activity -- stars: coronae -- stars: individual: Proxima Centauri -- X-rays: stars
Offprint request: M. Güdel, guedel@astro.phys.ethz.ch
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