GALEX ultraviolet observations of stellar variability in the Hyades and Pleiades clusters
S. E. Browne, B. Y. Welsh, J. M. Wheatley

TL;DR
This study uses GALEX UV observations to detect and analyze stellar variability, including flares, in the Hyades and Pleiades clusters, revealing insights into stellar activity and flare energies in different star types.
Contribution
First detailed UV variability survey of Hyades and Pleiades stars, identifying flare events and long-term activity patterns in M-type stars using GALEX data.
Findings
Detected 16 UV variable sources, mainly M-type stars.
Observed flare energies ranging from 2E27 to 5E29 erg.
Found long-term UV activity without flares, suggesting continuous small-scale flaring.
Abstract
We present GALEX near ultraviolet (NUV:1750 - 2750A) and far ultraviolet (FUV: 1350 - 1750A) imaging observations of two 1.2 degree diameter fields in the Hyades and Pleiades open clusters in order to detect possible UV variability of the member stars. We have performed a detailed software search for short-term UV flux variability during these observations of the approx 400 sources detected in each of the Hyades and Pleiades fields to identify flare-like (dMe) stellar objects. This search resulted in the detection of 16 UV variable sources, of which 13 can be directly associated with probable M-type stars. The other UV sources are G-type stars and one newly discovered RR Lyrae star, USNOB1.0 1069-0046050, of period 0.624 day and distance 4.5-7.0 kpc. Light curves of photon flux versus time are shown for 7 flare events recorded on six probable dMe stars. UV energies for these flares span…
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