Time-Resolved Properties and Global Trends in dMe Flares from Simultaneous Photometry and Spectra
Adam F. Kowalski (1, 7), Suzanne L. Hawley (1), John P. Wisniewski, (2), Rachel A. Osten (3), Eric J. Hilton (4), Jon A. Holtzman (5), Sarah J., Schmidt (6), James R. A. Davenport (1) ((1) University of Washington, (2), University of Oklahoma

TL;DR
This study analyzes twenty M dwarf flares using simultaneous photometry and spectra to understand their white-light emission mechanisms and compare observations with radiative-hydrodynamic models.
Contribution
It provides the first homogeneous survey of line and continuum emission during dMe flares with high cadence data, offering new constraints for flare models.
Findings
Detection of Balmer continuum emission in all flares.
Blue continuum at flare maximum with temperatures 9000-14000 K.
Redder continuum dominates during late gradual phase.
Abstract
We present a homogeneous survey of line and continuum emission from near-ultraviolet (NUV) to optical wavelengths during twenty M dwarf flares with simultaneous, high cadence photometry and spectra. These data were obtained to study the white-light continuum components at bluer and redder wavelengths than the Balmer jump. Our goals were to break the degeneracy between emission mechanisms that have been fit to broadband colors of flares and to provide constraints for radiative-hydrodynamic (RHD) flare models that seek to reproduce the white-light flare emission. The main results from the continuum analysis are the following: 1) the detection of Balmer continuum (in emission) that is present during all flares and with a wide range of relative contributions to the continuum flux at bluer wavelengths than the Balmer jump; 2) a blue continuum at flare maximum that is linearly decreasing with…
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