Multi-wavelength characterization of stellar flares on low-mass stars using SDSS and 2MASS time domain surveys
James R. A. Davenport, Andrew C. Becker, Adam F. Kowalski, Suzanne L., Hawley, Sarah J. Schmidt, Eric J. Hilton, Branimir Sesar, Roc Cutri

TL;DR
This study analyzes the rates and characteristics of stellar flares on low-mass M dwarf stars across optical and near-infrared wavelengths using large-scale time domain survey data, providing new insights into flare detectability and frequency.
Contribution
It introduces the first comprehensive rates of M dwarf flares in optical and NIR bands, extending flare models into NIR, and evaluates detection thresholds across spectral types.
Findings
Optical flare rates align with previous studies.
NIR flare detection frequency is over two orders of magnitude lower.
Flares exhibit a power-law distribution of small amplitude flux increases.
Abstract
We present the first rates of flares from M dwarf stars in both red optical and near infrared (NIR) filters. We have studied ~50,000 M dwarfs from the SDSS Stripe 82 area, and 1,321 M dwarfs from the 2MASS Calibration Scan Point Source Working Database that overlap SDSS imaging fields. We assign photometric spectral types from M0 to M6 using (r-i) and (i-z) colors for every star in our sample. Stripe 82 stars each have 50-100 epochs of data, while 2MASS Calibration stars have ~1900 epochs. From these data we estimate the observed rates and theoretical detection thresholds for flares in eight photometric bands as a function of spectral type. Optical flare rates are found to be in agreement with previous studies, while the frequency per hour of NIR flare detections is found to be more than two orders of magnitude lower. An excess of small amplitude flux increases in all bands exhibits a…
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