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GIOVANNI PERES

A coronal explosion on the flare star CN Leonis

  • Authors: SCHMITT J H M M; REALE F; LIEFKE C; WOLTER U; FUHRMEISTER B; REINERS A; PERES G
  • Publication year: 2008
  • Type: Articolo in rivista (Articolo in rivista)
  • Key words: X-rays: stars, stars: individual: CN Leo, stars: flares, stars: coronae, stars: activity
  • OA Link: http://hdl.handle.net/10447/37169

Abstract

We present simultaneous high-temporal and high-spectral resolution observations of the nearby flare star CN Leo at optical and soft X-ray wavelengths. During our observing campaign a major flare occurred, raising the star's instantaneous energy output by almost three orders of magnitude. The flare shows the often observed impulsive behavior, with a rapid rise and slow decay in the optical and a broad soft X-ray maximum about 200 seconds after the optical flare peak. In addition to this usually encountered flare phenomenology we find, however, an extremely short (τ _dec ≈ 2 s) soft X-ray peak, which is very likely of thermal, rather than nonthermal nature and coincides temporally with the optical flare peak. While at hard X-ray energies nonthermal bursts are routinely observed on the Sun at flare onset, thermal soft X-ray bursts on time scales of seconds have never been observed in a solar, nor stellar context. Time-dependent, one-dimensional hydrodynamic modeling of this event requires an extremely short energy deposition time scale τ _dep of a few seconds to reconcile theory with observations, thus suggesting that we are witnessing the results of a coronal explosion on CN Leo. Thus the flare on CN Leo provides the opportunity to observationally study the physics of the long-sought “micro-flares” thought to be responsible for coronal heating.