X-ray flares on the UV Ceti-type star CC Eridani: a "peculiar" time-evolution of spectral parameters
I. Crespo-Chac\'on (1, 2), G. Micela (1), F. Reale (1, 3), M., Caramazza (1, 3), J. L\'opez-Santiago (1, 2), I. Pillitteri (3) ((1), INAF - Osservatorio Astronomico di Palermo, (2) Departamento de Astrof\'isica, y Ciencias de la Atm\'osfera, Universidad Complutense de Madrid

TL;DR
This study investigates two weak X-ray flares on the active binary star CC Eri using time-resolved spectroscopy, revealing constant plasma temperatures and small flaring loops, suggesting that stellar flares are scaled-up solar flares and the light curve results from multiple low-energy events.
Contribution
First detailed analysis of weak X-ray stellar flares showing constant spectral temperatures and small loop sizes, expanding understanding of flare properties beyond large events.
Findings
Flares lasted 3.4 and 7.1 ks with flux increases of 1.5-1.9 times
Spectral analysis shows constant temperatures at 3, 10, and 22 MK
Flares occur in small loops much smaller than stellar radii
Abstract
Context: Weak flares are supposed to be an important heating agent of the outer layers of stellar atmospheres. However, due to instrumental limitations, only large X-ray flares have been studied in detail until now. Aims: We used an XMM-Newton observation of the very active BY-Dra type binary star CC Eri in order to investigate the properties of two flares that are weaker than those typically studied in the literature. Methods: We performed time-resolved spectroscopy of the data taken with the EPIC-PN CCD camera. A multi-temperature model was used to fit the spectra. We inferred the size of the flaring loops using the density-temperature diagram. The loop scaling laws were applied for deriving physical parameters of the flaring plasma. We also estimated the number of loops involved in the observed flares. Results: A large X-ray variability was found. Spectral analysis showed that…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
