Short-Term H-alpha Variability in M Dwarfs
Khee-Gan Lee, Edo Berger, Gillian R. Knapp

TL;DR
This study investigates short-term H-alpha emission variability in mid- to late-M dwarfs, revealing frequent variability, increasing with later spectral types, and suggesting potential links to stellar properties and energy release mechanisms.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed analysis of short-term H-alpha variability timescales and amplitudes in M dwarfs, highlighting spectral type dependence and variability distribution patterns.
Findings
80% of M dwarfs show significant H-alpha variability
Variability amplitude ratios range from 1.2 to 4
Rate of large flares (>10x increase) is less than 0.05 per hour
Abstract
We spectroscopically study the variability of H-alpha emission in mid- to late-M dwarfs on timescales of ~0.1-1 hr as a proxy for magnetic variability. About 80% of our sample exhibits statistically significant variability on the full range of timescales probed by the observations, and with amplitude ratios in the range of ~1.2-4. No events with an order of magnitude increase in H-alpha luminosity were detected, indicating that their rate is < 0.05 /hr (95% confidence level). We find a clear increase in variability with later spectral type, despite an overall decrease in H-alpha "activity" (i.e., L_{H-alpha}/L_{bol}). For the ensemble of H-alpha variability events, we find a nearly order of magnitude increase in the number of events from timescales of about 10 to 30 min, followed by a roughly uniform distribution at longer durations. The event amplitudes follow an exponential…
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