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A&A 474, 495-504 (2007)
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:20078064
X-ray flaring from the young stars in Cygnus OB2
J. F. Albacete Colombo1, 2, M. Caramazza1, E. Flaccomio1, G. Micela1, and S. Sciortino11 INAF - Osservatorio Astronomico di Palermo, Piazza del Parlamento 1, 90134 Palermo, Italy
e-mail: facundo@astropa.unipa.it
2 Centro Universitario Regional Zona Atlantica (CURZA) - Univ. nacional del COMAHUE, Monsenor Esandi y Ayacucho (8500), Viedma (Rio Negro), Argentina
(Received 12 June 2007 / Accepted 2 August 2007 )
Abstract
Aims.We characterize individual and ensemble properties of
X-ray flares from stars in the Cygnus OB2 and ONC star-forming regions.
Methods.We
analyzed X-ray lightcurves of 1003 Cygnus OB2 sources observed with Chandra
for 100 ks and of 1616 ONC sources detected in the "Chandra Orion
Ultra-deep Project" 850 ks observation. We employed a binning-free
maximum likelihood method to segment the light-curves into intervals
of constants signal and identified flares on the basis of both the
amplitude and the time-derivative of the source luminosity. We then
derived and compared the flare frequency and energy distribution of
Cygnus OB2 and ONC sources. The effect of the length of the observation on
these results was investigated by repeating the statistical analysis
on five 100 ks-long segments extracted from the ONC data.
Results.We
detected 147 and 954 flares from the Cygnus OB2 and ONC sources,
respectively. The flares in Cygnus OB2 have decay times ranging from
0.5 to about 10 h. The flare energy distributions of all
considered flare samples are described at high energies well by a
power law with index
. At low energies, the
distributions flatten, probably because of detection incompleteness.
We derived average flare frequencies as a function of flare energy.
The flare frequency is seen to depend on the source's intrinsic X-ray
luminosity, but its determination is affected by the length of the
observation. The slope of the high-energy tail of the energy
distribution is, however, affected little. A comparison of Cygnus OB2 and
ONC sources, accounting for observational biases, shows that the two
populations, known to have similar X-ray emission levels, have very
similar flare activity.
Conclusions.Studies of flare activity are only comparable
if performed consistently and taking the observation length into
account. Flaring activity does not vary appreciably between the age of
the ONC (~1 Myr) and that of Cygnus OB2 (~2 Myr). The slope of
the distribution of flare energies is consistent with the micro-flare
explanation of the coronal heating.
Key words: stars: activity -- stars: corona -- stars: low-mass, brown dwarfs -- X-rays: stars
© ESO 2007
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