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Flares in open clusters with K2

Authors :
Sarah J. Schmidt
Klaus G. Strassmeier
James R. A. Davenport
Ekaterina Ilin
Source :
Astronomy & Astrophysics. 622:A133
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
EDP Sciences, 2019.

Abstract

The presence and strength of a stellar magnetic field and activity is rooted in a star's fundamental parameters such as mass and age. Can flares serve as an accurate stellar "clock"? To explore if we can quantify an activity-age relation in the form of a flaring-age relation, we measured trends in the flaring rates and energies for stars with different masses and ages. We investigated the time-domain photometry provided by Kepler's follow-up mission K2 and searched for flares in three solar metallicity open clusters with well-known ages, M45 (0.125 Gyr), M44 (0.63 Gyr), and M67 (4.3 Gyr). We updated and employed the automated flare finding and analysis pipeline Appaloosa, originally designed for Kepler. We introduced a synthetic flare injection and recovery subroutine to ascribe detection and energy recovery rates for flares in a broad energy range for each light curve. We collected a sample of 1 761 stars, mostly late-K to mid-M dwarfs and found 751 flare candidates with energies ranging from $4\cdot10^{32}$ erg to $6\cdot10^{34}$ erg, of which 596 belong to M45, 155 to M44, and none to M67. We find that flaring activity depends both on $T_\mathrm{eff}$, and age. But all flare frequency distributions have similar slopes with $\alpha \approx2.0-2.4$, supporting a universal flare generation process. We discuss implications for the physical conditions under which flares occur, and how the sample's metallicity and multiplicity affect our results.<br />Comment: 17 pages, 11 figures, appendix. Accepted to A&A

Details

ISSN :
14320746 and 00046361
Volume :
622
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Astronomy & Astrophysics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....870ff63c2c7f23b6485f594289760844
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/201834400