The Implications of M Dwarf Flares on the Detection and Characterization of Exoplanets at Infrared Wavelengths
Benjamin M. Tofflemire (1,2), John P. Wisniewski (1), Adam F. Kowalski, (1), Sarah J. Schmidt (1), Praveen Kundurthy (1), Eric J. Hilton (1,3), Jon, A. Holtzman (4), Suzanne L. Hawley (1) ((1) University of Washington, (2), University of Wisconsin-Madison

TL;DR
This study investigates how energetic flares on M dwarf stars affect infrared observations for exoplanet detection, finding that most flares do not significantly interfere with IR measurements, but very energetic flares could be detectable.
Contribution
The paper provides the first detailed IR response measurements of M dwarf flares, quantifies their impact on exoplanet detection, and establishes thresholds for flare-induced variability in IR observations.
Findings
Most M dwarf flares induce less than 12 milli-mags in IR bands.
Energetic flares occur less than once every 10-18 hours.
Infrared observations are generally robust against typical M dwarf flares.
Abstract
We present the results of an observational campaign which obtained high time cadence, high precision, simultaneous optical and IR photometric observations of three M dwarf flare stars for 47 hours. The campaign was designed to characterize the behavior of energetic flare events, which routinely occur on M dwarfs, at IR wavelengths to milli-magnitude precision, and quantify to what extent such events might influence current and future efforts to detect and characterize extrasolar planets surrounding these stars. We detected and characterized four highly energetic optical flares having U-band total energies of ~7.8x10^30 to ~1.3x10^32 ergs, and found no corresponding response in the J, H, or Ks bandpasses at the precision of our data. For active dM3e stars, we find that a ~1.3x10^32 erg U-band flare (delta Umax ~1.5 mag) will induce <8.3 (J), <8.5 (H), and <11.7 (Ks) milli-mags of a…
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