New Insights into White-Light Flare Emission from Radiative-Hydrodynamic Modeling of a Chromospheric Condensation
Adam F. Kowalski (1,2), Suzanne L. Hawley (3), Mats Carlsson (4), Joel, C. Allred (2), Han Uitenbroek (5), Rachel A. Osten (6), Gordon Holman (2), ((1) University of Maryland College Park, (2) NASA's Goddard Space Flight, Center, (3) University of Washington

TL;DR
This study uses advanced radiative-hydrodynamic modeling to explain the optical and near-ultraviolet spectra of M dwarf flares, revealing how dense chromospheric condensations produce observed continuum features.
Contribution
It presents the first self-consistent radiative-hydrodynamic model reproducing observed flare spectra, including the blackbody component and Balmer jump ratio, by incorporating high-energy electron impacts and hydrogen opacity effects.
Findings
Model reproduces observed 10,000 K blackbody continuum.
Balmer jump ratio explained by optically thick recombination.
Landau-Zener transitions reveal ambient charge density.
Abstract
(abridged) The heating mechanism at high densities during M dwarf flares is poorly understood. Spectra of M dwarf flares in the optical and near-ultraviolet wavelength regimes have revealed three continuum components during the impulsive phase: 1) an energetically dominant blackbody component with a color temperature of T 10,000 K in the blue-optical, 2) a smaller amount of Balmer continuum emission in the near-ultraviolet at lambda 3646 Angstroms and 3) an apparent pseudo-continuum of blended high-order Balmer lines. These properties are not reproduced by models that employ a typical "solar-type" flare heating level in nonthermal electrons, and therefore our understanding of these spectra is limited to a phenomenological interpretation. We present a new 1D radiative-hydrodynamic model of an M dwarf flare from precipitating nonthermal electrons with a large energy flux of…
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