Chromospheric Variability in SDSS M Dwarfs. II. Short-Timescale H-alpha Variability
E. A. Kruse, E. Berger (Harvard), G. R. Knapp, J. E. Gunn, C. P., Loomis, R. H. Lupton (Princeton), D. J. Schlegel (LBNL)

TL;DR
This study analyzes short-timescale H-alpha variability in thousands of M dwarfs from SDSS, revealing increased variability in later spectral types and differences between persistent and intermittent emission sources.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive analysis of short-term chromospheric H-alpha variability across a large sample of M dwarfs using SDSS data.
Findings
H-alpha emission in about 16% of sources at least once
Variability increases from M0 to M5, then plateaus or declines at M9
Objects with intermittent emission show larger variability
Abstract
[Abridged] We present the first comprehensive study of short-timescale chromospheric H-alpha variability in M dwarfs using the individual 15 min spectroscopic exposures for 52,392 objects from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey. Our sample contains about 10^3-10^4 objects per spectral type bin in the range M0-M9, with a total of about 206,000 spectra and a typical number of 3 exposures per object (ranging up to a maximum of 30 exposures). Using this extensive data set we find that about 16% of the sources exhibit H-alpha emission in at least one exposure, and of those about 45% exhibit H-alpha emission in all of the available exposures. Within the sample of objects with H-alpha emission, only 26% are consistent with non-variable emission, independent of spectral type. The H-alpha variability, quantified in terms of the ratio of maximum to minimum H-alpha equivalent width (R_EW), and the ratio…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
