Back to Search Start Over

The High-Energy Radiation Environment Around a 10 Gyr M Dwarf: Habitable at Last?

Authors :
France, Kevin
Duvvuri, Girish
Egan, Hilary
Koskinen, Tommi
Wilson, David J.
Youngblood, Allison
Froning, Cynthia S.
Brown, Alexander
Alvarado-Gomez, Julian D.
Berta-Thompson, Zachory K.
Drake, Jeremy J.
Garraffo, Cecilia
Kaltenegger, Lisa
Kowalski, Adam F.
Linsky, Jeffrey L.
Loyd, R. O. Parke
Mauas, Pablo J. D.
Miguel, Yamila
Pineda, J. Sebastian
Rugheimer, Sarah
Schneider, P. Christian
Tian, Feng
Vieytes, Mariela
France, Kevin
Duvvuri, Girish
Egan, Hilary
Koskinen, Tommi
Wilson, David J.
Youngblood, Allison
Froning, Cynthia S.
Brown, Alexander
Alvarado-Gomez, Julian D.
Berta-Thompson, Zachory K.
Drake, Jeremy J.
Garraffo, Cecilia
Kaltenegger, Lisa
Kowalski, Adam F.
Linsky, Jeffrey L.
Loyd, R. O. Parke
Mauas, Pablo J. D.
Miguel, Yamila
Pineda, J. Sebastian
Rugheimer, Sarah
Schneider, P. Christian
Tian, Feng
Vieytes, Mariela
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

High levels of X-ray and UV activity on young M dwarfs may drive rapid atmospheric escape on temperate, terrestrial planets orbiting within the liquid water habitable zone. However, secondary atmospheres on planets orbiting older, less active M dwarfs may be stable and present more promising candidates for biomarker searches. We present new HST and Chandra observations of Barnard's Star (GJ 699), a 10 Gyr old M3.5 dwarf, acquired as part of the Mega-MUSCLES program. Despite the old age and long rotation period of Barnard's star, we observe two FUV ($\delta_{130}$ $\approx$ 5000s; $E_{130}$ $\approx$ 10$^{29.5}$ erg each) and one X-ray ($E_{X}$ $\approx$ 10$^{29.2}$ erg) flares, and estimate a high-energy flare duty cycle (defined here as the fraction of the time the star is in a flare state) of $\sim$ 25\%. A 5 A - 10 $\mu$m SED of GJ 699 is created and used to evaluate the atmospheric stability of a hypothetical, unmagnetized terrestrial planet in the habitable zone ($r_{HZ}$ $\sim$ 0.1 AU). Both thermal and non-thermal escape modeling indicate (1) the $quiescent$ stellar XUV flux does not lead to strong atmospheric escape: atmospheric heating rates are comparable to periods of high solar activity on modern Earth, and (2) the $flare$ environment could drive the atmosphere into a hydrodynamic loss regime at the observed flare duty cycle: sustained exposure to the flare environment of GJ 699 results in the loss of $\approx$ 87 Earth atmospheres Gyr$^{-1}$ through thermal processes and $\approx$ 3 Earth atmospheres Gyr$^{-1}$ through ion loss processes, respectively. These results suggest that if rocky planet atmospheres can survive the initial $\sim$ 5 Gyr of high stellar activity, or if a second generation atmosphere can be formed or acquired, the flare duty cycle may be the controlling stellar parameter for the stability of Earth-like atmospheres around old M stars.<br />Comment: Accepted to AJ

Details

Database :
OAIster
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1363533184
Document Type :
Electronic Resource
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3847.1538-3881.abb465