$\alpha$ Centauri A in the far infrared
R. Liseau (1), B. Montesinos (2), G. Olofsson (3), G. Bryden (4), J., P. Marshall (5), D. Ardila (6,7), A. Bayo Aran (8,9), W. C. Danchi (10), C., del Burgo (11), C. Eiroa (5), S. Ertel (12), M. C. W. Fridlund (13), A. V., Krivov (14), G. L. Pilbratt (13), A. Roberge (15)

TL;DR
This study measures the temperature minimum of alpha Centauri A in the far infrared, providing the first direct measurement of such a feature on a main-sequence star other than the Sun, enhancing understanding of stellar atmospheres.
Contribution
The paper presents the first direct measurement of the temperature minimum in a main-sequence star other than the Sun, using far infrared observations of alpha Centauri A.
Findings
The temperature minimum of alpha Cen A is approximately 3920 K.
FIR emission originates from the temperature minimum region above the photosphere.
Alpha Cen A's FIR photosphere is marginally cooler than the Sun's.
Abstract
Chromospheres and coronae are common phenomena on solar-type stars. Understanding the energy transfer to these heated atmospheric layers requires direct access to the relevant empirical data. Study of these structures has, by and large, been limited to the Sun thus far. The region of the temperature reversal can be directly observed only in the far infrared and submm. We aim at the determination of the characteristics of the atmosphere in the region of the temperature minimum of the solar sister star alpha Cen A. For the nearby binary system alpha Centauri, stellar parameters are known with high accuracy from measurements. For the basic model parameters Teff, log g and [Fe/H], we interpolate in the grid of GAIA/PHOENIX stellar model atmospheres and compute the corresponding model for the G2 V star alpha Cen A. Comparison with photometric measurements shows excellent agreement between…
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.
