X-ray flares in Orion young stars. I. Flare characteristics
Konstantin V. Getman (1), Eric D. Feigelson (1), Patrick S. Broos (1),, Giuseppina Micela (2), Gordon P. Garmire (1) ((1) PSU, (2) INAF)

TL;DR
This study analyzes 216 powerful X-ray flares from young stars in Orion, revealing their characteristics, similarities to solar flares, and challenging existing solar-stellar scaling laws, using a novel spectral analysis method.
Contribution
It introduces a new flare spectral analysis technique and provides the largest homogeneous dataset of PMS stellar flares, offering new insights into flare properties and mechanisms.
Findings
COUP flares are among the most powerful, longest, and hottest studied.
No significant differences in peak luminosity or temperature among flare classes.
Flares may not fit existing solar-scaling laws for power and duration.
Abstract
Pre-main sequence (PMS) stars are known to produce powerful X-ray flares which resemble magnetic reconnection solar flares scaled by factors up to 10^4. However, numerous puzzles are present including the structure of X-ray emitting coronae and magnetospheres, effects of protoplanetary disks, and effects of stellar rotation. To investigate these issues in detail, we examine 216 of the brightest flares from 161 PMS stars observed in the Chandra Orion Ultradeep Project (COUP). These constitute the largest homogeneous dataset of PMS, or indeed stellar flares at any stellar age, ever acquired. Our effort is based on a new flare spectral analysis technique that avoids nonlinear parametric modeling. It can be applied to much weaker flares and is more sensitive than standard methods. We provide a catalog with >30 derived flare properties and an electronic atlas for this unique collection of…
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