X-Ray Flaring on the dMe Star, Ross 154
B. J. Wargelin, V. L. Kashyap, J. J. Drake, D. Garc\'ia-Alvarez, and, P. W. Ratzlaff

TL;DR
This study analyzes two Chandra X-ray observations of Ross 154, revealing a large stellar flare, evidence of microflaring, and variations in coronal composition, while also exploring the flare's physical properties and searching for a stellar wind halo.
Contribution
First detailed analysis of Ross 154's flaring activity, spectral properties, and coronal abundances using Chandra data, including insights into flare evolution and microflaring contributions.
Findings
Large flare with L_X = 1.8x10^30 ergs/s observed
Microflaring likely accounts for most quiescent emission
No detection of stellar wind charge-exchange halo
Abstract
We present results from two Chandra imaging observations of Ross 154, a nearby flaring M dwarf star. During a 61-ks ACIS-S exposure, a very large flare occurred (the equivalent of a solar X3400 event, with L_X = 1.8x10^30 ergs/s) in which the count rate increased by a factor of over 100. The early phase of the flare shows evidence for the Neupert effect, followed by a further rise and then a two-component exponential decay. A large flare was also observed at the end of a later 48-ks HRC-I observation. Emission from the non-flaring phases of both observations was analyzed for evidence of low level flaring. From these temporal studies we find that microflaring probably accounts for most of the `quiescent' emission, and that, unlike for the Sun and the handful of other stars that have been studied, the distribution of flare intensities does not appear to follow a power-law with a single…
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