X-Ray Spectroscopy of Stars
M. Guedel (ETH Zurich, Switzerland), Y. Naze (Univ. Liege, Belgium)

TL;DR
This paper reviews recent advances in understanding stellar X-ray spectra, focusing on coronal structures, accretion processes, and stellar winds in both cool and hot stars using high-resolution data from XMM-Newton and Chandra.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive synthesis of recent spectral diagnostics and discoveries related to stellar coronae, accretion shocks, and stellar winds across various star types.
Findings
Identification of new spectral features in pre-main sequence stars
Insights into coronal structure and thermal stratification
Constraints on stellar wind properties from high-resolution spectra
Abstract
(abridged) Non-degenerate stars of essentially all spectral classes are soft X-ray sources. Low-mass stars on the cooler part of the main sequence and their pre-main sequence predecessors define the dominant stellar population in the galaxy by number. Their X-ray spectra are reminiscent, in the broadest sense, of X-ray spectra from the solar corona. X-ray emission from cool stars is indeed ascribed to magnetically trapped hot gas analogous to the solar coronal plasma. Coronal structure, its thermal stratification and geometric extent can be interpreted based on various spectral diagnostics. New features have been identified in pre-main sequence stars; some of these may be related to accretion shocks on the stellar surface, fluorescence on circumstellar disks due to X-ray irradiation, or shock heating in stellar outflows. Massive, hot stars clearly dominate the interaction with the…
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