Evolution of the solar activity over time and effects on planetary atmospheres. II. kappa^1 Ceti, an analog of the Sun when life arose on Earth
I. Ribas (ICE, CSIC-IEEC, Spain), G. F. Porto de Mello (U. Rio, Janeiro, Brazil), L. D. Ferreira (U. Rio Janeiro, Brazil), E. Hebrard(LAB,, Bordeaux, France), F. Selsis (LAB, Bordeaux, France), S. Catalan (U., Hertfordshire, UK), A. Garces (ICE, CSIC-IEEC, Spain)

TL;DR
This study investigates the high-energy UV flux of kappa^1 Ceti, a star similar to the early Sun, to better understand its impact on planetary atmospheres and the origin of life on Earth.
Contribution
It provides detailed atmospheric parameters and UV flux measurements of kappa^1 Ceti, an analog of the early Sun, improving models of early planetary atmospheres.
Findings
kappa^1 Ceti's UV flux is 35% lower than the Sun's between 210-300 nm
UV flux of kappa^1 Ceti matches the Sun at 170 nm
kappa^1 Ceti is estimated to be 0.4-0.8 Gyr old with a mass of ~1.04 solar masses
Abstract
The early evolution of Earth's atmosphere and the origin of life took place at a time when physical conditions at the Earth where radically different from its present state. The radiative input from the Sun was much enhanced in the high-energy spectral domain, and in order to model early planetary atmospheres in detail, a knowledge of the solar radiative input is needed. We present an investigation of the atmospheric parameters, state of evolution and high-energy fluxes of the nearby star kap^1 Cet, previously thought to have properties resembling those of the early Sun. Atmospheric parameters were derived from the excitation/ionization equilibrium of Fe I and Fe II, profile fitting of Halpha and the spectral energy distribution. The UV irradiance was derived from FUSE and HST data, and the absolute chromospheric flux from the Halpha line core. From careful spectral analysis and the…
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