The Ultraviolet Radiation Environment Around M dwarf Exoplanet Host Stars
Kevin France, Cynthia S. Froning, Jeffrey L. Linsky (Colorado), Aki, Roberge (GSFC), John T. Stocke (Colorado), Feng Tian (Tsinghua University),, Rachel Bushinsky (Colorado), Jean-Michel Desert (Caltech), Pablo Mauas,, Mariela Vieytes (IAFE-Universidad de Buenos Aires)

TL;DR
This study uses Hubble observations to characterize the UV radiation environment of nearby M dwarf exoplanet hosts, revealing significant UV emission, variability, and molecular hydrogen fluorescence, which are crucial for understanding planetary atmospheres.
Contribution
First comprehensive UV spectral analysis of M dwarf exoplanet hosts, providing publicly available data and insights into stellar UV emission and variability.
Findings
All six M dwarf hosts exhibit UV emission; none are UV quiet.
Ly-alpha fluxes are 37-75% of total UV flux, exceeding solar levels by over 1000 times.
UV emission lines show variability of 50-500% on timescales of 100-1000 seconds.
Abstract
The spectral and temporal behavior of exoplanet host stars is a critical input to models of the chemistry and evolution of planetary atmospheres. At present, little observational or theoretical basis exists for understanding the ultraviolet spectra of M dwarfs, despite their critical importance to predicting and interpreting the spectra of potentially habitable planets as they are obtained in the coming decades. Using observations from the Hubble Space Telescope, we present a study of the UV radiation fields around nearby M dwarf planet hosts that covers both FUV and NUV wavelengths. The combined FUV+NUV spectra are publically available in machine-readable format. We find that all six exoplanet host stars in our sample (GJ 581, GJ 876, GJ 436, GJ 832, GJ 667C, and GJ 1214) exhibit some level of chromospheric and transition region UV emission. No "UV quiet" M dwarfs are observed. The…
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