1. Simultaneous Detection of Optical Flares of the Magnetically Active M Dwarf Wolf 359
- Author
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Lin, Han-Tang, Chen, Wen-Ping, Liu, Jinzhong, Zhang, Xuan, Zhang, Yu, Wang, Andrew, Wang, Shiang-Yu, Lehner, Matthew J., Wen, C. Y., Guo, J. K., Chang, Y. H., Chang, M. H., Tsai, Anli, Lin, Chia-Lung, Hsu, C. Y., and Ip, Wing
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We present detections of stellar flares of Wolf\,359, an M6.5 dwarf in the solar neighborhood (2.41~pc) known to be prone to flares due to surface magnetic activity. The observations were carried out from 2020 April 23 to 29 with a 1-m and a 0.5-m telescope separated by nearly 300~km in Xinjiang, China. In 27~hr of photometric monitoring, a total of 13 optical flares were detected, each with a total energy of $\gtrsim 5 \times 10^{29}$~erg. The measured event rate of about once every two hours is consistent with those reported previously in radio, X-ray and optical wavelengths for this star. One such flare, detected by both telescopes on 26 April, was an energetic event with a released energy of nearly $10^{33}$~erg. The two-telescope lightcurves of this major event sampled at different cadences and exposure timings enabled us to better estimate the intrinsic flare profile, which reached a peak of up to 1.6 times the stellar quiescent brightness, that otherwise would have been underestimated in the observed flare amplitudes of about $0.4$ and $0.8$, respectively, with single telescopes alone. The compromise between fast sampling so as to resolve a flare profile versus a longer integration time for higher photometric signal-to-noise provides a useful guidance in the experimental design of future flare observations., Comment: 16 pages, 10 figures, 3 tables
- Published
- 2022
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