Large X-ray Flares on Stars Detected with MAXI/GSC: A Universal Correlation between the Duration of a Flare and its X-ray Luminosity
Yohko Tsuboi, Kyohei Yamazaki, Yasuharu Sugawara, Atsushi Kawagoe,, Soichiro Kaneto, Ryo Iizuka, Takanori Matsumura, Satoshi Nakahira, Masaya, Higa, Masaru Matsuoka, Mutsumi Sugizaki, Yoshihiro Ueda, Nobuyuki Kawai,, Mikio Morii, Motoko Serino, Tatehiro Mihara, Hiroshi Tomida

TL;DR
This study reports the detection of 23 giant stellar X-ray flares with MAXI/GSC, revealing a universal correlation between flare duration and X-ray luminosity across a wide range of stellar types and energies.
Contribution
The paper presents the first all-sky survey of giant stellar flares with MAXI/GSC and establishes a universal tau-L_X correlation spanning 5 to 12 orders of magnitude.
Findings
Detected 23 giant stellar flares with high luminosity and energy.
Discovered a universal correlation tau~L_X^0.2 across stellar and solar flares.
Identified rapid rotation as a potential factor in large flare generation.
Abstract
23 giant flares from 13 active stars (eight RS CVn systems, one Algol system, three dMe stars and one YSO) were detected during the first two years of our all-sky X-ray monitoring with the gas propotional counters (GSC) of the Monitor of All-sky X-ray Image (MAXI). The observed parameters of all of these MAXI/GSC flares are found to be at the upper ends for stellar flares with the luminosity of 10^(31-34) ergs s-1 in the 2-20 keV band, the emission measure of 10^(54-57) cm-3, the e-folding time of 1 hour to 1.5 days, and the total radiative energy released during the flare of 10^(34-39) ergs. Notably, the peak X-ray luminosity of 5(3-9)*10^33 ergs s-1 in the 2-20 keV band was detected in one of the flares on II Peg, which is one of the, or potentially the, largest ever observed in stellar flares. X-ray flares were detected from GT Mus, V841 Cen, SZ Psc, and TWA-7 for the first time in…
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