The Independency of Stellar Mass Loss Rates on stellar X-ray Luminosity and Activity Level based on Solar X-ray flux and Solar Wind Observations
Ofer Cohen

TL;DR
This study shows that stellar mass loss rates are independent of stellar X-ray luminosity and activity level, based on solar observations, challenging the common proxy used in stellar evolution models.
Contribution
The paper introduces a new understanding that stellar mass loss rates are not correlated with activity levels and provides a simple formula for estimating these rates based on magnetic and stellar parameters.
Findings
Solar mass loss rate is approximately constant at 2×10^{-14} M_sun/yr.
No clear dependency of mass flux on solar X-ray flux was observed.
Derived a formula predicting stellar mass loss rates of 10^{-15} to 10^{-12} M_sun/yr for Sun-like stars.
Abstract
Stellar mass loss rates are an important input ingredient for stellar evolution models since they determine stellar evolution parameters such as stellar spin-down and increase in stellar luminosity through the lifetime of a star. Due to the lack of direct observations of stellar winds from Sun-like stars stellar X-ray luminosity and stellar level of activity are commonly used as a proxy for estimating stellar mass loss rates. However, such an intuitive activity --- mass loss rate relation is not well defined. In this paper, I study the mass loss rate of the Sun as a function of its activity level. I compare in-situ solar wind measurements with the solar activity level represented by the solar X-ray flux. I find no clear dependency of the solar mass flux on solar X-ray flux. Instead, the solar mass loss rate is scattered around an average value of . This…
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